US5729607A - Non-linear digital communications system - Google Patents

Non-linear digital communications system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US5729607A
US5729607A US08/649,976 US64997696A US5729607A US 5729607 A US5729607 A US 5729607A US 64997696 A US64997696 A US 64997696A US 5729607 A US5729607 A US 5729607A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
noise
signal
chaotic
conduit
receiver
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
US08/649,976
Inventor
Anthony DeFries
Andrew Denis
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Neosoft AG
Original Assignee
Neosoft AG
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Neosoft AG filed Critical Neosoft AG
Priority to US08/649,976 priority Critical patent/US5729607A/en
Priority to US08/886,133 priority patent/US6178217B1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US5729607A publication Critical patent/US5729607A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L27/00Modulated-carrier systems
    • H04L27/001Modulated-carrier systems using chaotic signals
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B1/00Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
    • H04B1/69Spread spectrum techniques
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J1/00Frequency-division multiplex systems
    • H04J1/02Details
    • H04J1/12Arrangements for reducing cross-talk between channels

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a communication system which can use existing telecommunication or power infrastructures to provide higher data transfer volumes, at improved transmission throughput rates, and over a broader bandwidth. More particularly, this invention relates to an apparatus and method for carrying a desired signal on the noise components inherent to a particular conduit.
  • POTS Plain Old Telephone Service
  • POTS is offered over copper wires and represents the lowest level on the bandwidth spectrum. It generally records between 4 Kbps and 19.2 Kbps in available bandwidth, but can be upwardly adjusted with fast modem and data compression techniques.
  • V.32bis modem coupled with a 4 to 1 signal compression of V.42bis will theoretically provide throughput of more than 50 Kbps.
  • data can only be moved at about 20 Kbps to 30 Kbps.
  • V-Fast standards that run at 19.2 Kbps, with a total of 112 Kbps theoretically possible after data compression, many analysts believe that without improvements to the copper lines themselves, this is as fast as data transfer is going to get over dial-up copper lines without major infrastructure modifications.
  • This method requires a special, dedicated copper line infrastructure and provides a single 56 Kbps channel.
  • An installed base of these single channel leased copper lines is in operation, and their greater bandwidth makes them a better choice than POTS for fast data transfer, such as for unidirectional video-conferencing.
  • Installing the base of copper lines is, however, expensive. They are also limited to only the single 56 Kbps bandwidth channel and thus do not provide fast enough data transfer to support, for example, simultaneous video data conferencing.
  • ISDN Integrated Services Digital Network
  • ISDN provides two 56 Kbps voice grade channels and one 16 Kbps data channel. It requires expensive and complex digital switches, which transform all inputs into binary digits.
  • ISDN requires a special structure, so for the ISDN to operate as a universal system for data transfer, approximately 700 million existing global telephone lines must be converted into the ISDN structure. So far, less than 1% of those lines have been converted to support the ISDN and those have been installed mostly in campuses or large company settings.
  • N-ISDN narrowband ISDN
  • B-ISDN broadband ISDN
  • Other forms (and drawbacks) of B-ISDN, including T1 multiplexing and ATM multiplexing, are discussed more specifically below. But, in general, B-ISDN can be characterized as providing higher data throughputs through the use of special and expensive switches and equipment.
  • Fractional T-1 provides enough bandwidth for 30 frames per second of low quality video utilizing an advanced version of the X.25 packet switching standard. This requires expensive modifications at both the central office as well as the customer premises.
  • T-1 provides a complete digital service, allowing 23 voice grade channels and two data channels. It does so, unfortunately, at great expense.
  • Bell Communications Research is proposing an Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) which would use electronic signal processing to raise weak transmissions to acceptable levels of 1.54 megabits per second (Mbps) across 18,000 feet over existing copper.
  • ADSL requires interface cards at the central company office and at residences, as well as a television decoder and line conditioning of various forms.
  • Ethernet is the dominant Local Area Network (LAN) architecture with a 10 Mbps rate.
  • LAN Local Area Network
  • IBM standard Token Ring is more costly and less open and provides up to 16 Mbps.
  • these methods provide adequate access to large digital data files via a small packet burst delivery mode, but suffer from significant performance problems with the delivery requirements of video and audio files, because it was designed to handle sporadic "Bursty" types of information not continuous high volume streams that require synchronization to a time base.
  • T-3 is the distribution backbone of the telephone system at 45 Mbps. It can provide broadcast quality NTSC video signals, but is extremely expensive to deploy, due to the number of voice grade lines (about 600) that must be multiplexed and demultiplexed using expensive hardware at both the central and customer facilities.
  • FDDI has application over optic fibers or copper lines as the conduit.
  • FDDI can link up to 500 users at a distance of 500 kilometers. Cost of the fiber installation is extremely high.
  • Copper line FDDI has been reasonably successful in computer local area networks but lack the original capacity of fiber optics that make it useful in broad deployments.
  • ATM is an outgrowth of ISDN and is designed to integrate multiple data types at varying speeds with dynamic bandwidth allocation. Throughput starts at 155 Mbps, with theoretical limits approaching the Gbps level. ATM technology is extremely costly, requiring significant infrastructure outlay and modification and constant upgrading of the ATM switching software to control data flow and channel allocation.
  • Bandwidth expansion has also been constrained in the wireless transmission area.
  • cellular and traditional wireless There are several wireless modes of communications, chiefly cellular and traditional wireless.
  • Cellular phone technology is currently straining at the boundaries of 19.2 Kb/Second of throughput (utilizing Cellular Digital Packet Data technology).
  • the chief limitations of cellular throughput are a direct result of the Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) schemes utilized, and the traditional analog approach to spectrum usage. Coupled with the noise and interference that accompanies these transmission modes, the noise floor rapidly overcomes the available power of the transmitter. As a result, the receivers are unable to separate noise from the information transmitted.
  • TDMA Time Division Multiple Access
  • conductive wireline communications and wireless communications suffer from performance limitations caused by signal interference, ambient noise, and spurious noise.
  • these limitations effect the available bandwidth, distance, and carrying capacity of a transmission system employing the wireline or wireless communication systems.
  • the noise floor and signal interference in the transmission conduit rapidly overcome the signal transmitted. This noise on the wireless or wireline communications conduit is a significant limitation to the ability of conventional systems to expand their available bandwidth.
  • the present invention provides an increased available bandwidth over any conduit, whether conductive or non-conductive.
  • the present invention achieves the increased bandwidth by indexing available frequency and by employing, as a carrier, a nonlinear chaotic noise signal inherently present on the conduit.
  • the frequency indexing aspect of the present invention occurs by treating disjunct frequency bands as if they were contiguous for transmission purposes. This allows available disjunct portions of the bandwidth to be pooled.
  • the present bandwidth pooling may be combined with another aspect of the present invention in which the chaotic noise signal on any conduit may be employed as the carrier for the desired signal transmission.
  • conductive conduit such as copper can support hundreds of megabits per second for multiple users over great distances of bandwidth with the present invention.
  • the approach of the present invention is to encode a signal with the naturally supported complex noise frequencies of the conduit. Specifically, the present invention mixes the desired signal with the noise signal that naturally occurs on the conduit. This results in a conduit that has carrier frequencies that the conduit naturally supports and that can be used as a noise sustained structure for the transmission of digital information.
  • the signal input onto a particular conduit by the present invention will naturally attenuate outside of the conduit since the noise carrier that the desired signal is carried on in the conduit will not be supported in a different conduit medium.
  • the signal transmission distance is not a direct function of the power requirements at the transmitter.
  • the noise carriers are a self-supporting part of the conduit.
  • the desired signal need not, and in fact should not, overcome the noise carrier by boosting the transmit power for the desired signal substantially over the noise floor.
  • the desired signal is in fact normalized to a level at or below the inherent noise floor of the conduit, rather than at a level that rapidly increases it.
  • Signal-to-Noise ratios of less than or equal to one are thus usable and, in fact, desirable with the present invention.
  • This is entirely contrary to conventional wisdom that teaches boosting the signal-to-noise ratio to a point where the voltage level of the desired signal sufficiently exceeds the voltage level of the noise signal to distinguish the two signals from each other at the receiver. Since the present invention is able to recover the desired signal from the noise carrier without boosting the voltage of the desired signal over the noise, the power level of the desired signal can be dramatically reduced while significantly increasing the carrying distance.
  • the noise structure on the conduit is a naturally occurring periodic perturbation induced by nonlinear electromagnetic stimulation resulting in subharmonic bifurcations with long range phase coherence using this structure to carry the desired signal is intrinsically security and privacy encoded.
  • the noise structure is chaotic, once the desired signal is modulated onto the chaotic noise signal, the resulting signal will appear as static, just as the noise carrier itself appeared before the desired signal was mixed in.
  • the present communication system will support a much greater number of concurrent users at higher throughput than do traditional wireless/cellular or wireline systems.
  • the frequency indexing of the present invention the total information being introduced to the conduit is broken apart and carried on independent carriers at different frequencies. Since the independent carriers are generally self sustaining noise components of the system itself, they will have minimal destructive interference with each other. In fact, when the independent carriers do interfere with each other, the interferences will not be self sustaining and will not be part of the carrier channel of the present invention.
  • the present invention provides for bi-directional isochronous use of the bandwidth, for example, for interactive video, data or information transfer.
  • the present invention provides larger bandwidths without modifying the existing telecommunication infrastructures.
  • the desired signals are carried over existing conductive conduits or communications infrastructures, and do so without disturbing the current traffic on that infrastructure.
  • existing telephone lines can be used with POTS or other conventional technology while the present invention is using the same line to transmit hundreds of Mbits/s of data.
  • the present invention selects available frequencies to use as carriers during the pooling procedure and selectively avoids frequencies that carry current traffic.
  • the present invention is not limited to conductive conduits. Because the present invention transmits the desired signal as a wireless waveform, it can use as a waveguide either an electrical conductive medium (such as existing copper lines) or an electrically dielectric media (such as air). The present invention thus has application in high bandwidth wireless or cellular communications.
  • the present invention provides a high degree of noise immunity, the system may be usable in areas where present day communication systems would be unable to function due to the noise levels.
  • the present invention contains various technologies as portions of the system:
  • a set of wired or wireless address resolution protocols are provided that allow the bandwidth of the connection between any two points to be managed and optimized by the intelligent selection of channel codes from the pool of available addresses.
  • a software-based distributed switching and routing system that effectively substitutes bandwidth allocation and/or address resolution for any form of dedicated or non-dedicated physical, electrical, mechanical, magnetic, electromagnetic, electronic, or other switching system.
  • a code switching scheme for the allocation of communication channels is included to allow the aggregate bandwidth of the entire available communication spectrum to be dynamically reallocated to increase or decrease channel bandwidths thereby optimizing for aggregate bandwidth and individual channel throughput.
  • a frequency translation method between available disjunct bands is included to increase the effective aggregate bandwidth.
  • Code switching and frequency multiplexing processes are provided to allocate individual channels and segment the bandwidth based on spreading and channel codes.
  • Intelligent self determining software processes are included and employ channel switching for data management within the aggregate bandwidth. These processes implement code switching algorithms to maximize throughput of the individual channels as a function directly proportional to the baud rate and inversely proportional to the signal to noise ratio.
  • FIG. 1A is a schematic diagram of a prior art transmitter using a chaotic signal carrier
  • FIG. 1B is a schematic diagram of a prior art receiver using a chaotic signal carrier
  • FIG. 2 is a simplified, schematic diagram of an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of an example transmitter and receiver according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a flowchart illustrating a method of transmitting and receiving according to an example embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 5 is an example available bandwidth diagram
  • FIG. 6 is a schematic diagram of an example embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram showing an application of the present invention in a wireless environment.
  • a desired signal is transmitted over a conduit using the inherent noise structure on the conduit, rather than a conventional voltage modulated signal as a carrier. Since the noise structure is used as a carrier, greater throughput and usable bandwidth can be achieved without significant increases in the transmit power. This opens otherwise unavailable frequency spectrums for use in transmitting a desired signal, and permits significant bandwidth pooling to increase the total available bandwidth.
  • FIG. 1A illustrates a prior art device that uses chaotic signals to transmit a desired message. This device loosely coincides with that described in the article Mastering Chaos, Scientific American, August, 1993 by Ditto et al.
  • a transmitter 110 is described in which a desired signal M is modulated onto a chaotic signal X before transmission.
  • the desired signal M is input to the mixer 112 (shown by example in FIG. 1A as an adder), together with a chaotic signal X.
  • the sum of the message signal M and the chaotic signal X yields the mixed signal ⁇ which is transmitted by the antenna 114.
  • the chaotic signal X is generated by a drive signal input D to a subsystem 116.
  • the subsystem 116 reacts to the chaotic signal D generated by a chaotic drive signal generator 118 in a manner that creates a chaotic signal X.
  • the chaotic signal X is stable, but is generally random in time and thus may appear as static or white noise.
  • the mixed signal ⁇ also appears as a chaotic or noise-like waveform.
  • the mixed signal ⁇ thus includes a non-chaotic component comprising the desired signal M and a chaotic component comprising the chaotic signal X. Since the chaotic component X is present in ⁇ , ⁇ itself will also appear chaotic and random in time, even though the desired signal M is also present and may be non-chaotic and identifiable in time.
  • the antenna 114 transmits both the mixed signal ⁇ and the drive signal D to the antenna 120 in FIG. 1B.
  • FIG. 1B shows the receiver 122 that communicates with the transmitter 110 of FIG. 1A.
  • the antenna 120 of the receiver 122 receives the two signals, ⁇ and D, that were transmitted by the transmitter 110 of FIG. 1A.
  • the receiver 122 includes a subsystem 124 that is matched to the subsystem shown in FIG. 1A such that the chaotic drive signal D, when introduced to either of the subsystem 124 of the receiver 122 or the subsystem 116 of the transmitter 110 will produce the same chaotic signal X.
  • the drive signal D is received by the antenna 120 of the receiver 122 and is input to the subsystem 124 to reproduce the signal X.
  • Signal X is then demodulated from the mixed signal ⁇ in the demodulator 126 (shown by example in FIG. 1A as a subtractor) to reproduce the desired message signal M.
  • the message signal M is then produced at the desired signal receiver 128.
  • the import of the transmitter 110 and receiver 122 in FIGS. 1A and FIG. 1B is the recognition that the drive signal D, even though it may be chaotic and noise-like, when introduced to the subsystems 116 and 124, will produce an identical and synchronous chaotic signal X.
  • the chaotic signal X is noise-like and is random in time. Nevertheless, since chaotic signal X can be reproduced in synchrony at two different locations, it can be used to encode and decode the message signal M in the respective transmitter 110 and receiver 122. In essence, since signal X is identically produced in both the receiver demixer and transmitter mixer, it can be used to mix and demix the desired signal.
  • FIG. 2 shows an example embodiment of the present invention.
  • the desired message signal generator 210 mixes the desired message signal M with the noise signal N in a mixer 212 to obtain a mixed signal S that is transmitted on a conduit 216 from a transmitter 214 to a receiver 218.
  • the noise signal N is obtained by the noise waveform detector 220 as the inherent and self sustaining complex noise frequencies that exist on the conduit 216 in its natural state.
  • the receiver 218 of FIG. 2 also includes a noise waveform detector 222 that detects the same inherent self sustaining noise components N on the conduit that the noise waveform detector 220 of the transmitter 214 detected. Having obtained the identical noise component N from the conduit 216 that the transmitter obtained, the receiver 218 is able to demodulate the desired message signal M from the sum signal S in the mixer 224 and output it to the message receiver 226.
  • the transmitter 214 and receiver 218 use a chaotic noise signal to carry an encoded message signal across a conduit 216.
  • the chaotic noise signal N contains the naturally occurring complex periodic frequencies that occur on the particular non-homogenous conduits used. When perturbed by a nonlinear source, these complex periodic frequencies can be separated into individual frequency carriers that are themselves supported by the conduit and that are relatively insensitive to any other type of noise occurring on the conductive conduit.
  • FIG. 3 shows the present transmitter 314 (corresponding to transmitter 214 in FIG. 2) and receiver 318 (corresponding to receiver 218 in FIG. 2) in greater detail.
  • the message signal generator 310 is shown as the information or data input to the digital encoder 312 where the information data (desired signal) is mixed with the noise component from the noise waveform detector 320.
  • the noise component is obtained by the combination of the chaotic synchronizer 520, the chaotic line noise generator 522, and the stabilizing subsystem 524.
  • the chaotic synchronizer 520 couples the stabilizing subsystem 524 to the transmission medium by traditional transmission coupling methods.
  • the chaotic line noise 522 is the chaotic noise that exists on the conduit.
  • the noise is used to normalize the signal to the level of the chaotic noise by traditional electrical engineering means. This is described mathematically as ##EQU1## where P is a result of a perturbation introduced into a system at a point in time i over a period of time t.
  • the active driving signal (chaotic signal generated as an amplified, gain adjusted function of media noise) is supplied in synchronous fashion by transmission concurrently with the information stream, or as a passive interconnection relying on the characteristic residual chaotic noise that exists within the system or on the conduit within the span of time defined as t.
  • the Stabilizing Subsystem 524 utilizes a Chaotic Noise Code approach by substituting nonlinear components of the line noise for pseudo random noise codes with a signal modulated to the noise used as a carrier. This system is identical to the receiver matched stabilizing subsystem 322.
  • the Chaotic Noise Code Resolution (used by the Stabilizing Subsystem 322 and 524) is described mathematically as: ##EQU2## where P is a result of a perturbation introduced into a system at a point in time i over a period of time t.
  • the noise signal from the noise waveform detector 320 is then mixed with the information from the desired signal generator 310 in the encoder 312.
  • the mixed signal is then normalized and nonlinearly modulated in the output device 510. This brings the digital information onto the frequency modulated carrier by any of a plurality of means known by those skilled in the art of digital transmission.
  • the mixed signal is then passed onto the conduit 316.
  • the conduit 316 can be a conductive or non-conductive medium.
  • the noise waveform detector 320 also provides a synch signal to drive the stabilizing subsystem 322 (like the stabilizing subsystem 524) to the receiver 318.
  • the transmitter 314 thus provides the receiver 318 with both the mixed signal from the output device 510 and a chaotic drive signal.
  • the receiver 318 accepts the mixed signal from the output device 510 at a demodulator and gain compensator, which is a standard input device for a receiver.
  • the matched stabilizing subsystem 322 creates a chaotic signal identical to and in synchronous with the chaotic signal generated by the stabilizing subsystem 524 of the transmitter 314.
  • the receiver 318 decodes the desired signal by removing the noise component generated by the matched stabilizing subsystem 322 from the mixed signal S in the digital decoder 324.
  • the desired signal is then output to the receiver output device 526.
  • the noise component N that is produced by the stabilizing subsystem 524 and the matched stabilizing subsystem 322 in the transmitter and receiver, respectively, is a chaotic signal that is not necessarily explicitly identified in time by either the transmitter 314 or the receiver 318.
  • the identification of this signal would be extremely difficult and is not necessary since, although the signal is chaotic and effectively random, it is synchronously resolved in both the stabilizing subsystem 524 and the matched stabilizing subsystem 322, thereby allowing it to be used for the encoding and decoding processes.
  • the algorithms used by the noise waveform detector 320 to detect the sustainable noise component on the conduit and to index the available frequency bands are described in greater detail below.
  • the algorithms are described, for simplicity, in well-known pseudo-code format.
  • the overall purpose of the first algorithm is to effectively calculate what is commonly referred to as the chaotic "attractor" for the noise component:
  • the bits per second variable is defined as a function of the required data rate and bit error rate.
  • the chips per bit variable is defined as a function of degree of external noise immunity (from none to highest, a relative variable), and the spreading factor as it is defined from the spectral density profile and software defined transmission parameters.
  • Line 4 is a header that describes the following steps as attempting to define the chaotic noise code values for the particular conduit and the particular parameters required in the definition steps 2 and 3 above.
  • the chaotic noise code values will be used in the final step (13) to determine the waveforms that will allow the existing noise to be used as an information carrier.
  • the noise code value is initialized at 0. As will be seen in the coming steps, the characteristics of the noise component at the current noise code value will be analyzed for a sustainable noise structure. Then, at step 12 in the algorithm, the noise code value will be incremented to a new noise code index number and the analysis will be repeated.
  • Line 6 is the beginning of a loop to determine if the signal-to-noise ratio at the current noise code value is above a specified minimum.
  • the specified minimum is determined in a particular application by the requirements dictated by the modulation parameters. Also at line 6, the number of available and useful chaotic noise codes so far determined is added to identify whether the throughput required can be met by the available noise codes.
  • an aggregate frequency band is sampled to identify the chaotic noise codes as defined in lines 9-12.
  • the noise profile is tested to determine if it yields a viable carrier (as a function of its effective ability to carry the information with the required external noise immunity).
  • the carrier channel number is incremented.
  • the nonlinear chaotic noise code to be used for calculating the overall noise structure of line 13 is stored.
  • the overall noise sustained structure to be used as the carriers for the information is calculated as a recursive sum of the vectors' dot products in their real and imaginary planes. This statement takes into account the electromagnetic properties for wave guide purposes, as well as the noise profile for signal modulation requirements.
  • C n is the carrier noise code for value n. The calculation of F recurse is described in greater detail below.
  • x (t, ⁇ ) a Cos( ⁇ )tCos(t)-a Sin( ⁇ )tSin(t) for the explicitly exact solution of the simple harmonic when perturbed by an external energy source.
  • ⁇ .sub. ⁇ is a local instantaneous velocity of propagation that is a function of spatial and temporal coordinates allowing information to be transmitted by using the velocity solution to synchronize the subsystems so that the information (i.e., the perturbation) can be identified as a field distortion which is a function of time and amplitude.
  • the ratio of ⁇ /k (the ratio of the frequency to the wave number) as it applies to the phase velocity and the dispersion relation, shows that by varying the amplitude (rather than the source frequency) one can modulate the wave number in an exact manner rather than via a truncation of an expansion.
  • the information carrying field of the nonlinear medium thus oscillates in space time with linear control possible as is denoted by: ##EQU7## (ref. pg 10 Nonlinear Material Science, Explicitly Exact Solutions in a Family of Nonlinear Media).
  • Algorithm 2 describes the steps for separating out the carrier frequencies when nonlinear code division is used. Since the carrier frequencies are often functions of each other and themselves, they can be separated when noise is introduced to the system, rather than through externally defined carrier noise codes. This is described mathematically (in pseudo code) as:
  • Line 1 defines the algorithm as an overall frequency pooling for bandwidth allocation scheme.
  • step 2 the frequency bands are defined. This takes into account software defined parameters that may dictate that certain bands (due to licensing or other restraints) be avoided.
  • step 3 the beginning and ending points of the segments in an absolute (e.g. Hz) sense are determined.
  • Line 5 describes the purpose of steps 6 & 7. Depending on the required transmission rate, the bandwidth is allocated by performing either step 6 or step 7.
  • bandwidth is increased to optimize for the individual connection rate.
  • the connections are increased to optimize for more concurrent users.
  • step 8 a test is made to determine if the system is fully loaded to perform step (9).
  • step 9 the information is modulated onto the noise structure defined in algorithm 1 (steps 1-13).
  • FIG. 4 The operation of the transmitter of FIG. 3 is shown in FIG. 4 and described below.
  • a Digital or Analog Input is received at the input 310 of the transmitter 314.
  • parameters for the encoder 312 and decoder 324 are stored.
  • the parameters that are stored include: input format, output format, internal throughput information, embedded functions.
  • the information stored effectively decouples the transmission from the information encoding by allowing the information to be treated as a digital stream that is only dependent on format information at the time of decoding. This allows the system to support any compression/encoding format in a modular fashion.
  • the data is encoded at encoder 312 (for the transmitter 314) or decoded at the decoder 324 (for the receiver 318).
  • the digital encoding converts analog signals into a digital information stream in any predetermined format (e.g. MPEG, DVI, ASCII, etc.)
  • the decoding converts the digital information stream into a discrete analog form for output, buffering, or storage; via the application of a decoding/decompression method.
  • the system is CODEC and format independent to facilitate the implementation of any standard in modular fashion, via the decoupling of various aspects from the transmission method.
  • a very high dynamic range broadband transceiver (similar in nature to the devices described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,230,956 and 4,112,374 to Steinbrecher) allows the entire software definable frequency band to be down-converted and digitized. Once in a digital format the information can be treated independently of its original transmission methodology (TDMA, CDMA, analog, etc.) using software driven digital signal processors.
  • Transmission Parameter Storage The transmission parameters set the boundary conditions for the nonlinear CDMA systems and decouples the rest of the present invention from the transmission methodology and conduits.
  • the parameters that are stored include: bandwidth information (required, available, etc.); transmission characteristics (line crosstalk, frequency limits, existing spectrum profile, desired spectral density; and dynamic throughput information).
  • Non linear CDMA coding is done in a non sequential, non linear fashion from a pool of dynamic complex frequencies that represent the transmission medium's chaotic noise characteristics combined with an encoding address template that is required for decoding of the signal. This allows multiple signals reaching the receiver to be combined constructively rather than treating them as multipath interference.
  • Chaotic Noise Carrier Code Generator The generation of Chaotic Noise Carrier Codes (CNC codes) requires dynamic sampling of the transmission conduit's ambient and spurious noise spectrum in order to optimize the carrier and modulation frequencies' spectral density for the required signal to noise ratio as well as avoiding interference with other concurrent traffic such as analog or digital transmissions of data, voice, or visual information.
  • Dynamic Fine Gain Control Digital signal processors are employed to calculate the value of the gain (positive or negative) to be applied to a received signal to maintain a signal to noise ratio high enough to yield an error rate that is a ratio of the required throughput to a stochastic function of the dynamic noise sampling frequency as dictated by available DSP technology and required throughput.
  • the fine gain control also increases the resolution of the chaotic attractor for the specific connection and also constructively affects the noise sustained structure for the rest of the locally affected area.
  • the transceiver's AGC automatic gain control
  • the combined effect of the regulation of all of the transceivers' power levels within the cell has two important effects: 1) It maintains the effective size of the cell to be the minimum necessary to support the communications network, thereby minimizing the power requirements of both base stations and remote transceivers; and 2) it imposes a signature on the local area which has the effect of increasing the effective resolution of the chaotic attractor within the noise spectrum, which decreases the required output power of all transmission sources in that effective logical network.
  • Each fixed base station or mobile transceiver contributes to the network as both an active power regulation component of the cell and as a passive bridge transparently supporting other traffic without incurring data or address overhead.
  • the active logic interconnections are hardware and software interfaces that are specifically designed for the particular conduit (e.g. powerline, twisted pair, ethernet cabling, wireless, etc.) They have several functions: 1) physical coupling (impedance matching, timing signal calculation and generation, etc.); 2) storage of software enabled distributed functionality that can be accessed remotely (decoding keys, logical/physical address updating, etc.); 3) simulating or directly supporting analog switching and digital routing of the network information (e.g. bit error rate, S/N ratio, ambient noise, etc.) In contrast to the systems it interfaces with, much of the need for active regulation of the transmission conduit is avoided by identifying and using the existing noise sustained structure for transmission coding. This negates the need to directly filter, amplify, or change the spectral density profile of the signal.
  • the active logic interconnections are hardware and software interfaces that are specifically designed for the particular conduit (e.g. powerline, twisted pair, ethernet cabling, wireless, etc.) They have several functions: 1) physical coupling (impedance
  • Analog & Digital Output the resolved transmission of (1) Input.
  • This example embodiment of the invention thus provides a conductive or dielectric conduit used as a waveform guide to constrain a wireless signal.
  • the signal is dynamically and intelligently adjusted to take best advantage of the medium upon which it is being transmitted, and to use the inherent noise, power levels, available bandwidth and concurrent traffic to adjust that signal for optimum transmission quality. This results in a broad range of spectral density profiles that will support the desired signal.
  • the bandwidth indexing scheme is based on two criteria:
  • FIG. 5 generally illustrates an example of the bandwidth indexing scheme of the present invention.
  • the available frequencies are shown in a kHz range on the X-axis.
  • a voice band is illustrated between 2 kHz and 4 kHz.
  • a useable frequency band of between 4 kHz and 10 kHz is illustrated as Band A.
  • a band from 10 kHz to 20 kHz is dedicated to data use; a band from 20 kHz to 60 kHz is available as useable Band B; a band from 60 kHz to 100 kHz is identified as containing non-sustainable noise; and a band from 70 kHz to 100 kHz is identified as a useable Band C.
  • the present invention scrolls through available channels to identify the useable Bands A, B and C; the dedicated bands ("voice” and "data”); and the non-useable bands ("non-sustainable noise") in the spectrum shown in FIG. 5. These determinations are made through either external inputs (i.e., as in the case of dedicated voice and data lines) or by testing the frequency bands for the presence of sustainable noise components (i.e., as in the non-sustainable noise band of FIG. 5).
  • the useable bands A, B and C are identified by the present invention, the useable bands are pooled into a composite effective useable bandwidth of XHz. This is accomplished in the software of the present invention by identifying the bands A, B and C, mapping those bands, and transmitting data packets across the useable bands.
  • the frequency pool is indexed as sets of beginning and ending frequencies and the map of the pool is made available to any node on the network as a packet that can be requested.
  • the bands to be used are software selectable as to the minimum and maximum power allowable within each band in a continuous or discrete manner.
  • An object of the invention is that the power output can be restrained to milliwatts at any given frequency from 1 KHz to 1 GHz. Available bandwidth increases with frequency as signal duration decreases. In a typical system this would be compensated for with an increase in transmission power. In the invention this is not the case, since the underlying noise of the transmission signal is used to sustain the signal by acting as a nonlinear waveform guide.
  • the spectral density profile is software/firmware definable in frequency band, power level and roll off/attenuation. This provides a large degree of latitude in modifying signal transmission characteristics to reflect the dynamic needs of the transmission conduit (air, powerline, twisted-pair, etc.) and other constraints.
  • An example embodiment of the present invention uses wave division multiple access, which is the basic method used in any frequency selectable broadcast or communication channel (e.g. radio or television), to identify or utilize available frequency bands.
  • any frequency selectable broadcast or communication channel e.g. radio or television
  • the above apparatus and method can provide and maintain an isochronous transmission stream.
  • One exemplary method which may be employed to maintain an isochronous transmission stream provides data packet transmission, with each packet including a header containing:
  • This method allows for dynamic upshifts and downshifts in the bandwidth allocation without prior knowledge of the throughput for the information stream. This allows an isochronous session to be maintained within a synchronous session.
  • the error detection scheme is independent of the transmission, since the padding results in bits that can be stripped on either the sending or receiving end as needed to allow for a range of error detection from none (and no padding) to hardware level total error checking.
  • the nonlinear encoded digital information is capable of bit error rates exceeding 10 -9 .
  • isochronous transmission stream requires that there may be sent: at the beginning of the transmission:
  • This method allows for an isochronous connection to be maintained within an asynchronous link.
  • the data is not modulated onto the noise signal directly but rather bits are split into redundant sets of themselves and sent as individually carried streams similar to a code division multi-access scheme.
  • the major macroscopic difference between the present scheme and the code division multi-access scheme is the carrier frequencies in the present case are all naturally occurring periodic perturbations induced by nonlinear electromagnetic stimulation resulting in subharmonic bifurcations with long range phase coherence.
  • FIG. 6 illustrates an application of the present invention.
  • FIG. 6 shows a transmitter and a receiver coupled by the conduit 400 in which a uniform pulse code modulation (PCM) signal is modulated onto a chaotic noise signal in the transmitter and demodulated from the chaotic noise signal in the receiver.
  • PCM uniform pulse code modulation
  • the aspects of the present invention relating to the prediction of the noise waveform on the conduit 400 is performed in the matched stabilizing subsystems 410 and 412.
  • the matched stabilizing subsystems 410 and 412 produce synchronized chaotic signals that are modulated with the uniform PCM signal in the modulator 402 and demodulated from the combined signal in the demodulator 413.
  • the mux 404 is the output for the transmitter onto the conduit 400. It transmits at least three signals: 1) the result of the modulation of the uniform PCM signal and the output of the stabilizing subsystem 410 in the modulator 403, after its encoding by the residual encoder 403; 2) the gained compensation factor from the gain compensation circuit 406; and 3) the synch signal from the coefficient analyzer 414 that will drive both the stabilizing subsystem 410 and the stabilizing subsystem 412 to produce matched synchronized noise component signals. These three signals are transmitted across the conduit 400 to the demux 405 in the receiver.
  • the modulated PCM signal ("residual") is decoded in the decoder 407 and input to the demodulator 413.
  • the gain compensation signal is also output from the demux 405 to the decoder 407 to adjust for any gain disparity.
  • the drive signal from the coefficient analyzer 414 is applied to the stabilizer subsystem 412 to produce the identical output as that produced by the stabilizing subsystem 410 and input to the demodulator 413.
  • the output of the stabilizing subsystem 412 is then demodulated from the modulated signal, which has been decoded in the residual decoder 407, to reproduce the uniform PCM signal.
  • the present invention can be applied to any communications infrastructure, the goal of the invention is to be ultimately applied as a discrete isochronous narrowcast with any-to-any functionality wireless system; or a logical improvement over existing analog and digital cellular systems.
  • the intelligent/adaptive use of power provided by the present invention provides the capability to generate overlapping cells of any radius.
  • the average metropolitan area could be covered by two Wide Area Transceivers with overlapping cones of transmission. This is shown, by way of example, in FIG. 7.
  • Local Transceivers within these areas would have a cell radius that is intelligently and dynamically adjusted based on communications needs such as bandwidth requirements, density of other cells, power levels, etc.
  • Local transceivers outside the range of other local cells could tie into the Wide Area Transceiver to communicate with other local transceivers.
  • All Transceivers are both active and passive, in that they provide a routing pass through communications function even when not in use by the operator. This effectively distributes the switching and intelligence of the network to every local transceiver in a model similar to the emerging distributed peer-to-peer computer network.

Abstract

A multiple access communications data and information transport system and methodology for employing the noise present in any conduit as a carrier form using wireless chaotic waveform signals supported by nonlinear noise sustaining structures. The communications system utilizes digital devices and software embodying various algorithms designed to manipulate the nonlinear perturbations of any given conduit to establish a high bandwidth bidirectional, isochronous noise immune communications signal. Additionally, the system can be combined with any of a number of wireless or wireline communication methodologies to further enhance performance in terms of bandwidth, throughput, noise immunity, power consumption, cell size, and number of users without disturbing any concurrent signal traffic.
In further embodiments, the invention can be embedded into a plurality of user terminals or electronic devices linked to each other or to other services through both existing and emerging wireless and wired communications services.

Description

This is a Continuation of application Ser. No. 08/288,708, filed Aug. 12, 1994, now abandoned.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a communication system which can use existing telecommunication or power infrastructures to provide higher data transfer volumes, at improved transmission throughput rates, and over a broader bandwidth. More particularly, this invention relates to an apparatus and method for carrying a desired signal on the noise components inherent to a particular conduit.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Increasing the bandwidth of data transfer on transmission conduits is extremely important in today's high volume information transmission environment. The need for broader telecommunication bandwidths comes from several modern data transmission requirements. First, the higher bandwidths allow larger volumes of data to transmit in a shorter amount of time. This has become increasingly important as the size of data transmissions has continually grown. Modern examples of this desire for broader telecommunications bandwidths include the medical community's desire to transmit optical images of, for example, x-rays and CAT scans between remote hospitals and physicians. Such transmissions require greater bandwidths to transmit the large size data files in reasonable amounts of time. Another example is the desire for interactive video in homes and offices, for such applications as in-home movies-on-demand and video teleconferencing. The size of the data files to provide home video and real time video are simply too large to be feasibly transmitted without large increases in the available effective transmission throughput.
Conventional approaches to signal transmission on conductive wire lines is to voltage modulate a signal onto the conduit at a frequency that lies within the bounds at which the conduit can electrically conduct the signal. Because of this conventional approach, known modes of conductive wireline transmission are limited in available bandwidth to a spectrum within which the conductive wire line is able to electrically transmit the signal via voltage modulation yielding a current flow. As a result, costly and complicated schemes have been developed to increase the bandwidth and throughput in conventional conductive wireline communications systems using sophisticated switching schemes or signal time-sharing arrangements. Each of these methods is rendered costly and complex in part because the systems adhere to the conventional acceptance that the conductive wire line provides an available bandwidth constrained by its conductive properties.
Several conventional methods have thus been developed to increase bandwidth for the transmission of telecommunications signals over conductive wire lines. These systems illustrate how conventional thinking has constrained the available bandwidth on conductive wire lines, unless expensive and complex systems were added to channel the information onto the conduit more rapidly. Some of these conventional methods are described in Networked Media Sends A Message, New Media Maps (November, 1992) and in ISDN: a snapshot Proceedings of IEEE, Vol. 79 No. 2 (February, 1991) and are summarized below.
1. Conventional Method: Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS)
Bandwidth: 4 Kbps-19.2 Kbps
POTS is offered over copper wires and represents the lowest level on the bandwidth spectrum. It generally records between 4 Kbps and 19.2 Kbps in available bandwidth, but can be upwardly adjusted with fast modem and data compression techniques.
For example, a 14.4 Kbps V.32bis modem coupled with a 4 to 1 signal compression of V.42bis will theoretically provide throughput of more than 50 Kbps. In practice, however, over a typical business line, data can only be moved at about 20 Kbps to 30 Kbps. Even utilizing V-Fast standards that run at 19.2 Kbps, with a total of 112 Kbps theoretically possible after data compression, many analysts believe that without improvements to the copper lines themselves, this is as fast as data transfer is going to get over dial-up copper lines without major infrastructure modifications.
2. Conventional Method: Switched 56
Bandwidth: 56 Kbps
This method requires a special, dedicated copper line infrastructure and provides a single 56 Kbps channel. An installed base of these single channel leased copper lines is in operation, and their greater bandwidth makes them a better choice than POTS for fast data transfer, such as for unidirectional video-conferencing. Installing the base of copper lines is, however, expensive. They are also limited to only the single 56 Kbps bandwidth channel and thus do not provide fast enough data transfer to support, for example, simultaneous video data conferencing.
3. Conventional Method: Basic Rate ISDN (B-ISDN)
Bandwidth: 56 Kbps×2 bearer+16 Kbps data
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) provides two 56 Kbps voice grade channels and one 16 Kbps data channel. It requires expensive and complex digital switches, which transform all inputs into binary digits. ISDN requires a special structure, so for the ISDN to operate as a universal system for data transfer, approximately 700 million existing global telephone lines must be converted into the ISDN structure. So far, less than 1% of those lines have been converted to support the ISDN and those have been installed mostly in campuses or large company settings.
Standard ISDN, with two 56 Kbps channels and one 16 Kbps channel is sometimes referred to as narrowband ISDN (N-ISDN). Because of the limited bandwidth available in N-ISDN (112 Kbps+16 Kbps), it is inflexible for high resolution graphics, realtime video, medical imaging transmission and other high data volume applications. Available bandwidth under N-ISDN is not sufficient for modern or future requirements.
As a result of the bandwidth limitations of N-ISDN, various schemes have been proposed to increase the bandwidth of ISDN to Mbps levels. These methods are sometimes referred to as broadband ISDN (B-ISDN) and may involve multiplexing multiple channels. Schemes for multiplexing numerous N-ISDN channels, for example, may achieve bandwidths of several Mbps (ex. 29 channels×64 Kb/s=1.9 Mbps), but they do so at great cost. They require expensive switches and multiplexers, as well as sophisticated signaling schemes. Other forms (and drawbacks) of B-ISDN, including T1 multiplexing and ATM multiplexing, are discussed more specifically below. But, in general, B-ISDN can be characterized as providing higher data throughputs through the use of special and expensive switches and equipment.
4. Conventional Method: Switched 384 (Fractional T-1)
Bandwidth: 384 Kbps
At 384 Kbps Fractional T-1 provides enough bandwidth for 30 frames per second of low quality video utilizing an advanced version of the X.25 packet switching standard. This requires expensive modifications at both the central office as well as the customer premises.
5. Conventional Method: T-1, Primary Rate ISDN (PRI)
Bandwidth: 1.54 Mbps
T-1 provides a complete digital service, allowing 23 voice grade channels and two data channels. It does so, unfortunately, at great expense. To provide this T-1 capacity to residences for proposed video on demand services, for example, Bell Communications Research is proposing an Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) which would use electronic signal processing to raise weak transmissions to acceptable levels of 1.54 megabits per second (Mbps) across 18,000 feet over existing copper. Still in the prototype stage, ADSL requires interface cards at the central company office and at residences, as well as a television decoder and line conditioning of various forms.
6. Conventional Method: Ethernet and Token Ring
Bandwidth: 10 Mbps & 16 Mbps
Ethernet is the dominant Local Area Network (LAN) architecture with a 10 Mbps rate. The IBM standard Token Ring is more costly and less open and provides up to 16 Mbps. Typically these methods provide adequate access to large digital data files via a small packet burst delivery mode, but suffer from significant performance problems with the delivery requirements of video and audio files, because it was designed to handle sporadic "Bursty" types of information not continuous high volume streams that require synchronization to a time base.
7. Conventional Method: T-3
Bandwidth: 45 Mbps
T-3 is the distribution backbone of the telephone system at 45 Mbps. It can provide broadcast quality NTSC video signals, but is extremely expensive to deploy, due to the number of voice grade lines (about 600) that must be multiplexed and demultiplexed using expensive hardware at both the central and customer facilities.
8. Conventional Method: Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI)
Bandwidth: 100 Mbps
A development by IBM that provides a LAN and WAN technology to deliver 100 Mbps. FDDI has application over optic fibers or copper lines as the conduit. When utilizing fiber optics, FDDI can link up to 500 users at a distance of 500 kilometers. Cost of the fiber installation is extremely high. Copper line FDDI has been reasonably successful in computer local area networks but lack the original capacity of fiber optics that make it useful in broad deployments.
9. Conventional Method: Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
Bandwidth: 155 Mbps to multiple Gbps over optic fiber
ATM is an outgrowth of ISDN and is designed to integrate multiple data types at varying speeds with dynamic bandwidth allocation. Throughput starts at 155 Mbps, with theoretical limits approaching the Gbps level. ATM technology is extremely costly, requiring significant infrastructure outlay and modification and constant upgrading of the ATM switching software to control data flow and channel allocation.
With the exception of the fiber optic systems, all of the above systems constrain the available bandwidth by adopting the conventional approach to signal transmission, that is, to voltage modulate a signal onto a conduit at a frequency that lies within the bounds of the conduit's ability to support the signal through its conductive properties producing a current flow. As a result, the signals travelling on the conduit must be coordinated with other traffic by expensive switches, processors and protocols.
Bandwidth expansion has also been constrained in the wireless transmission area. There are several wireless modes of communications, chiefly cellular and traditional wireless. Cellular phone technology is currently straining at the boundaries of 19.2 Kb/Second of throughput (utilizing Cellular Digital Packet Data technology). The chief limitations of cellular throughput are a direct result of the Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) schemes utilized, and the traditional analog approach to spectrum usage. Coupled with the noise and interference that accompanies these transmission modes, the noise floor rapidly overcomes the available power of the transmitter. As a result, the receivers are unable to separate noise from the information transmitted.
As is well known, conductive wireline communications and wireless communications suffer from performance limitations caused by signal interference, ambient noise, and spurious noise. In conventional transmission systems, these limitations effect the available bandwidth, distance, and carrying capacity of a transmission system employing the wireline or wireless communication systems. With both wireless and wireline communication systems, the noise floor and signal interference in the transmission conduit rapidly overcome the signal transmitted. This noise on the wireless or wireline communications conduit is a significant limitation to the ability of conventional systems to expand their available bandwidth.
The conventional wisdom for overcoming this limitation was to boost the power (i.e., increase the voltage of the signal) at the transmitter to boost the voltage level of the signal relative to the noise at the receiver. Without such boosting of the power at the transmitter, the receivers were unable to separate the noise from the desired signal. While some have tried to apply digital means to improve the signal-to-noise ratio while reducing power requirements, the overall performance of the systems is still significantly limited by the accompanying noise that is inherent in the transmission system used.
Qualcomm (U.S. Pat. No. 4,901,307), for example, has applied a digital Code Division Multiple Access system to achieve improvements in signal quality and power utilization, as well as a modest increase in bandwidth compared to TDMA technology, nevertheless, the improvements in bandwidth are relatively small.
Improving the transmission bandwidths across existing telecommunications conduits, without limiting carrying distances or capacities and without having to increase power to overcome noise floors, is desirable.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides an increased available bandwidth over any conduit, whether conductive or non-conductive. The present invention achieves the increased bandwidth by indexing available frequency and by employing, as a carrier, a nonlinear chaotic noise signal inherently present on the conduit.
The frequency indexing aspect of the present invention occurs by treating disjunct frequency bands as if they were contiguous for transmission purposes. This allows available disjunct portions of the bandwidth to be pooled.
The present bandwidth pooling may be combined with another aspect of the present invention in which the chaotic noise signal on any conduit may be employed as the carrier for the desired signal transmission. For example, conductive conduit such as copper can support hundreds of megabits per second for multiple users over great distances of bandwidth with the present invention.
While the conventional approach to transmitting on conductive conduit was to voltage modulate a signal onto a conduit at a frequency that lies within the bounds of the conduit's ability to support the signal via its conductive properties, the approach of the present invention is to encode a signal with the naturally supported complex noise frequencies of the conduit. Specifically, the present invention mixes the desired signal with the noise signal that naturally occurs on the conduit. This results in a conduit that has carrier frequencies that the conduit naturally supports and that can be used as a noise sustained structure for the transmission of digital information.
Further, because different conduits have different naturally occurring complex noise frequencies, the signal input onto a particular conduit by the present invention will naturally attenuate outside of the conduit since the noise carrier that the desired signal is carried on in the conduit will not be supported in a different conduit medium.
These naturally occurring complex frequencies of a particular conduit are, in fact, chaotic noise structures that are present and are self-supporting in any non-homogeneous media such as copper, air, etc. These structures may appear to be noise or static, but are actually dynamic sets of complex frequencies that can be used as information carriers. Many important results stem from employing these noise structures as the signal carrier.
First, since the inherent noise structure on the conduit is used as a carrier, the signal transmission distance is not a direct function of the power requirements at the transmitter. The noise carriers are a self-supporting part of the conduit. When the carriers are used to support the transmission of the desired signal, the desired signal need not, and in fact should not, overcome the noise carrier by boosting the transmit power for the desired signal substantially over the noise floor. The desired signal is in fact normalized to a level at or below the inherent noise floor of the conduit, rather than at a level that rapidly increases it.
Signal-to-Noise ratios of less than or equal to one are thus usable and, in fact, desirable with the present invention. This is entirely contrary to conventional wisdom that teaches boosting the signal-to-noise ratio to a point where the voltage level of the desired signal sufficiently exceeds the voltage level of the noise signal to distinguish the two signals from each other at the receiver. Since the present invention is able to recover the desired signal from the noise carrier without boosting the voltage of the desired signal over the noise, the power level of the desired signal can be dramatically reduced while significantly increasing the carrying distance.
Second, since the noise structure on the conduit is a naturally occurring periodic perturbation induced by nonlinear electromagnetic stimulation resulting in subharmonic bifurcations with long range phase coherence using this structure to carry the desired signal is intrinsically security and privacy encoded. In fact, because the noise structure is chaotic, once the desired signal is modulated onto the chaotic noise signal, the resulting signal will appear as static, just as the noise carrier itself appeared before the desired signal was mixed in.
Third, the present communication system will support a much greater number of concurrent users at higher throughput than do traditional wireless/cellular or wireline systems. With the frequency indexing of the present invention, the total information being introduced to the conduit is broken apart and carried on independent carriers at different frequencies. Since the independent carriers are generally self sustaining noise components of the system itself, they will have minimal destructive interference with each other. In fact, when the independent carriers do interfere with each other, the interferences will not be self sustaining and will not be part of the carrier channel of the present invention.
Fourth, since data is carried on channels that have an identifiable self sustaining noise carrier, a broad range of spectral density profiles are available for data transmission.
Fifth, the present invention provides for bi-directional isochronous use of the bandwidth, for example, for interactive video, data or information transfer.
Sixth, the present invention provides larger bandwidths without modifying the existing telecommunication infrastructures. The desired signals are carried over existing conductive conduits or communications infrastructures, and do so without disturbing the current traffic on that infrastructure. Thus, for example, existing telephone lines can be used with POTS or other conventional technology while the present invention is using the same line to transmit hundreds of Mbits/s of data. Specifically, the present invention selects available frequencies to use as carriers during the pooling procedure and selectively avoids frequencies that carry current traffic.
The present invention is not limited to conductive conduits. Because the present invention transmits the desired signal as a wireless waveform, it can use as a waveguide either an electrical conductive medium (such as existing copper lines) or an electrically dielectric media (such as air). The present invention thus has application in high bandwidth wireless or cellular communications.
Finally, since the present invention provides a high degree of noise immunity, the system may be usable in areas where present day communication systems would be unable to function due to the noise levels.
The present invention contains various technologies as portions of the system:
First, a set of wired or wireless address resolution protocols are provided that allow the bandwidth of the connection between any two points to be managed and optimized by the intelligent selection of channel codes from the pool of available addresses.
Next, a software-based distributed switching and routing system is provided that effectively substitutes bandwidth allocation and/or address resolution for any form of dedicated or non-dedicated physical, electrical, mechanical, magnetic, electromagnetic, electronic, or other switching system.
A code switching scheme for the allocation of communication channels is included to allow the aggregate bandwidth of the entire available communication spectrum to be dynamically reallocated to increase or decrease channel bandwidths thereby optimizing for aggregate bandwidth and individual channel throughput.
A frequency translation method between available disjunct bands is included to increase the effective aggregate bandwidth. Code switching and frequency multiplexing processes are provided to allocate individual channels and segment the bandwidth based on spreading and channel codes.
Intelligent self determining software processes are included and employ channel switching for data management within the aggregate bandwidth. These processes implement code switching algorithms to maximize throughput of the individual channels as a function directly proportional to the baud rate and inversely proportional to the signal to noise ratio.
Traditional coupling means may be used to bridge the transmitter/receiver onto any conduit.
The advantages and objects of the present invention will be understood by those in the art after careful review of the following descriptions, taken with the drawings, in which:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1A is a schematic diagram of a prior art transmitter using a chaotic signal carrier;
FIG. 1B is a schematic diagram of a prior art receiver using a chaotic signal carrier;
FIG. 2 is a simplified, schematic diagram of an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of an example transmitter and receiver according to the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a flowchart illustrating a method of transmitting and receiving according to an example embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 5 is an example available bandwidth diagram;
FIG. 6 is a schematic diagram of an example embodiment of the present invention; and
FIG. 7 is a diagram showing an application of the present invention in a wireless environment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENTLY PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
In the present invention, a desired signal is transmitted over a conduit using the inherent noise structure on the conduit, rather than a conventional voltage modulated signal as a carrier. Since the noise structure is used as a carrier, greater throughput and usable bandwidth can be achieved without significant increases in the transmit power. This opens otherwise unavailable frequency spectrums for use in transmitting a desired signal, and permits significant bandwidth pooling to increase the total available bandwidth.
Each of these aspects of the invention is discussed in turn below.
CHAOTIC NOISE MODULATION
FIG. 1A illustrates a prior art device that uses chaotic signals to transmit a desired message. This device loosely coincides with that described in the article Mastering Chaos, Scientific American, August, 1993 by Ditto et al. In the device of FIG. 1A, a transmitter 110 is described in which a desired signal M is modulated onto a chaotic signal X before transmission.
The desired signal M is input to the mixer 112 (shown by example in FIG. 1A as an adder), together with a chaotic signal X. The sum of the message signal M and the chaotic signal X yields the mixed signal Σ which is transmitted by the antenna 114. The chaotic signal X is generated by a drive signal input D to a subsystem 116. The subsystem 116 reacts to the chaotic signal D generated by a chaotic drive signal generator 118 in a manner that creates a chaotic signal X. The chaotic signal X is stable, but is generally random in time and thus may appear as static or white noise. When the chaotic signal X is mixed with the desired signal M at the mixer 112, the mixed signal Σ also appears as a chaotic or noise-like waveform. The mixed signal Σ thus includes a non-chaotic component comprising the desired signal M and a chaotic component comprising the chaotic signal X. Since the chaotic component X is present in Σ, Σ itself will also appear chaotic and random in time, even though the desired signal M is also present and may be non-chaotic and identifiable in time.
The antenna 114 transmits both the mixed signal Σ and the drive signal D to the antenna 120 in FIG. 1B. FIG. 1B shows the receiver 122 that communicates with the transmitter 110 of FIG. 1A. The antenna 120 of the receiver 122 receives the two signals, Σ and D, that were transmitted by the transmitter 110 of FIG. 1A. The receiver 122 includes a subsystem 124 that is matched to the subsystem shown in FIG. 1A such that the chaotic drive signal D, when introduced to either of the subsystem 124 of the receiver 122 or the subsystem 116 of the transmitter 110 will produce the same chaotic signal X.
The drive signal D is received by the antenna 120 of the receiver 122 and is input to the subsystem 124 to reproduce the signal X. Signal X is then demodulated from the mixed signal Σ in the demodulator 126 (shown by example in FIG. 1A as a subtractor) to reproduce the desired message signal M. The message signal M is then produced at the desired signal receiver 128.
The import of the transmitter 110 and receiver 122 in FIGS. 1A and FIG. 1B is the recognition that the drive signal D, even though it may be chaotic and noise-like, when introduced to the subsystems 116 and 124, will produce an identical and synchronous chaotic signal X. The chaotic signal X is noise-like and is random in time. Nevertheless, since chaotic signal X can be reproduced in synchrony at two different locations, it can be used to encode and decode the message signal M in the respective transmitter 110 and receiver 122. In essence, since signal X is identically produced in both the receiver demixer and transmitter mixer, it can be used to mix and demix the desired signal.
FIG. 2 shows an example embodiment of the present invention. In FIG. 2, the desired message signal generator 210 mixes the desired message signal M with the noise signal N in a mixer 212 to obtain a mixed signal S that is transmitted on a conduit 216 from a transmitter 214 to a receiver 218. The noise signal N is obtained by the noise waveform detector 220 as the inherent and self sustaining complex noise frequencies that exist on the conduit 216 in its natural state. The receiver 218 of FIG. 2 also includes a noise waveform detector 222 that detects the same inherent self sustaining noise components N on the conduit that the noise waveform detector 220 of the transmitter 214 detected. Having obtained the identical noise component N from the conduit 216 that the transmitter obtained, the receiver 218 is able to demodulate the desired message signal M from the sum signal S in the mixer 224 and output it to the message receiver 226.
Thus, the transmitter 214 and receiver 218 use a chaotic noise signal to carry an encoded message signal across a conduit 216. In fact, the chaotic noise signal N contains the naturally occurring complex periodic frequencies that occur on the particular non-homogenous conduits used. When perturbed by a nonlinear source, these complex periodic frequencies can be separated into individual frequency carriers that are themselves supported by the conduit and that are relatively insensitive to any other type of noise occurring on the conductive conduit.
FIG. 3 shows the present transmitter 314 (corresponding to transmitter 214 in FIG. 2) and receiver 318 (corresponding to receiver 218 in FIG. 2) in greater detail. In the transmitter 314, the message signal generator 310 is shown as the information or data input to the digital encoder 312 where the information data (desired signal) is mixed with the noise component from the noise waveform detector 320. The noise component is obtained by the combination of the chaotic synchronizer 520, the chaotic line noise generator 522, and the stabilizing subsystem 524.
The chaotic synchronizer 520 couples the stabilizing subsystem 524 to the transmission medium by traditional transmission coupling methods.
The chaotic line noise 522 is the chaotic noise that exists on the conduit. The noise is used to normalize the signal to the level of the chaotic noise by traditional electrical engineering means. This is described mathematically as ##EQU1## where P is a result of a perturbation introduced into a system at a point in time i over a period of time t.
The active driving signal (chaotic signal generated as an amplified, gain adjusted function of media noise) is supplied in synchronous fashion by transmission concurrently with the information stream, or as a passive interconnection relying on the characteristic residual chaotic noise that exists within the system or on the conduit within the span of time defined as t.
The Stabilizing Subsystem 524 utilizes a Chaotic Noise Code approach by substituting nonlinear components of the line noise for pseudo random noise codes with a signal modulated to the noise used as a carrier. This system is identical to the receiver matched stabilizing subsystem 322. The Chaotic Noise Code Resolution (used by the Stabilizing Subsystem 322 and 524) is described mathematically as: ##EQU2## where P is a result of a perturbation introduced into a system at a point in time i over a period of time t.
The noise signal from the noise waveform detector 320 is then mixed with the information from the desired signal generator 310 in the encoder 312. The mixed signal is then normalized and nonlinearly modulated in the output device 510. This brings the digital information onto the frequency modulated carrier by any of a plurality of means known by those skilled in the art of digital transmission. The mixed signal is then passed onto the conduit 316.
The conduit 316 can be a conductive or non-conductive medium. The noise waveform detector 320 also provides a synch signal to drive the stabilizing subsystem 322 (like the stabilizing subsystem 524) to the receiver 318. The transmitter 314 thus provides the receiver 318 with both the mixed signal from the output device 510 and a chaotic drive signal.
The receiver 318 accepts the mixed signal from the output device 510 at a demodulator and gain compensator, which is a standard input device for a receiver. In response to the drive signal from transmitter 314, the matched stabilizing subsystem 322, creates a chaotic signal identical to and in synchronous with the chaotic signal generated by the stabilizing subsystem 524 of the transmitter 314.
The receiver 318 decodes the desired signal by removing the noise component generated by the matched stabilizing subsystem 322 from the mixed signal S in the digital decoder 324. The desired signal is then output to the receiver output device 526.
The noise component N that is produced by the stabilizing subsystem 524 and the matched stabilizing subsystem 322 in the transmitter and receiver, respectively, is a chaotic signal that is not necessarily explicitly identified in time by either the transmitter 314 or the receiver 318. The identification of this signal would be extremely difficult and is not necessary since, although the signal is chaotic and effectively random, it is synchronously resolved in both the stabilizing subsystem 524 and the matched stabilizing subsystem 322, thereby allowing it to be used for the encoding and decoding processes.
The algorithms used by the noise waveform detector 320 to detect the sustainable noise component on the conduit and to index the available frequency bands are described in greater detail below. The algorithms are described, for simplicity, in well-known pseudo-code format. The overall purpose of the first algorithm is to effectively calculate what is commonly referred to as the chaotic "attractor" for the noise component:
ALGORITHM 1
__________________________________________________________________________
  CALCULATE ATTRACTOR FOR CONDUIT                                         
    bits/second required = F (data rate, bit error rate)                  
    chips/bit required=F (noise immunity, spreading factor)               
    DEFINE CHAOTIC NOISE CODE VALUES                                      
      n=0; # of chaotic noise codes defined                               
      until S/N>=S/N.sub.MIN & n>=(bits/second required *chips/bit        
  required) do                                                            
        until  (signal/noise)'=0 & (signal/noise)'''=1! or time out       
  expiration do                                                           
          sweep aggregate frequency band                                  
            F.sub.chaotic (code.sub.prev)>>new code                       
10.                                                                       
            if S/N.sub.new code >=S/N.sub.prev code                       
              n = n + 1                                                   
              Chaotic Noise Code.sub.n =new code                          
            end if                                                        
      end until                                                           
    end until                                                             
  end until                                                               
   ##STR1##                                                               
__________________________________________________________________________
The above pseudo-code is described below with references to the line numbers indicated.
In line 1, the overall goal of the algorithm is described as calculating the attractor for the particular conduit being used. This means attempting to define the noise structure (i.e., effective chaotic signal attractor) for the purposes of nonlinear signal modulation.
At line 2, the bits per second variable is defined as a function of the required data rate and bit error rate.
At line 3, the chips per bit variable is defined as a function of degree of external noise immunity (from none to highest, a relative variable), and the spreading factor as it is defined from the spectral density profile and software defined transmission parameters.
Line 4 is a header that describes the following steps as attempting to define the chaotic noise code values for the particular conduit and the particular parameters required in the definition steps 2 and 3 above. The chaotic noise code values will be used in the final step (13) to determine the waveforms that will allow the existing noise to be used as an information carrier.
At step 5, the noise code value is initialized at 0. As will be seen in the coming steps, the characteristics of the noise component at the current noise code value will be analyzed for a sustainable noise structure. Then, at step 12 in the algorithm, the noise code value will be incremented to a new noise code index number and the analysis will be repeated.
Line 6 is the beginning of a loop to determine if the signal-to-noise ratio at the current noise code value is above a specified minimum. The specified minimum is determined in a particular application by the requirements dictated by the modulation parameters. Also at line 6, the number of available and useful chaotic noise codes so far determined is added to identify whether the throughput required can be met by the available noise codes.
At line 7, the local and global nodes of the noise profile as a function of signal to noise ratios are found. This tests for a peak signal-to-noise ratio and a global maximum signal-to-noise ratio within a specified band.
At line 8, an aggregate frequency band is sampled to identify the chaotic noise codes as defined in lines 9-12.
At line 9, the chaotic derivatives of the subsampled noise profile is temporarily stored as the new code. The determination of FCHAOTIC is described in greater detail below.
At line 10, the noise profile is tested to determine if it yields a viable carrier (as a function of its effective ability to carry the information with the required external noise immunity).
At line 11, the carrier channel number is incremented.
At line 12, the nonlinear chaotic noise code to be used for calculating the overall noise structure of line 13 is stored.
At line 13, the overall noise sustained structure to be used as the carriers for the information is calculated as a recursive sum of the vectors' dot products in their real and imaginary planes. This statement takes into account the electromagnetic properties for wave guide purposes, as well as the noise profile for signal modulation requirements. Cn is the carrier noise code for value n. The calculation of Frecurse is described in greater detail below.
CALCULATING FCHAOTIC
Analogous to Floquet Theory (often referred to as Bloch Theory by physicists) for proof of lines stability for periodic solutions, there exist equilibrium points as well as subharmonic period doubling and other types of bifurcation points that together form the chaotic attractor of a nonlinear system. This chaotic attractor can be used as an information transport when perturbed by an external energy source.
This perturbation is the source of separable solutions of noise codes, and the stability and local periodicities of the noise sustained structure are the result of the equilibrium and bifurcation points being bounded within a finite phase space of its limit cycles as defined in the Poincare-Bendixson Theorem (reference pg. 187 Non Linear Systems, Artech House, 1986).
Beginning with dx/dt=F(x), we wish to find a solution of X of period T such that X(T+t)=X(t), ∀t implying that X is representative of a closed curve in its local phase space. This is a stable solution for a carrier by virtue of the fact that the equilibrium point is at least a metastable, though not necessarily a globally stable Lyapunov trajectory. For small perturbations of Xo -X, the limit cycle of the closed phase space, which represents its local attractor, is bounded by: x=∜a cos(t+θ0), y=∜a sin (t+θ0) at its locally defined origin in a two dimensional infinite phase plane for amplitudes a >0 as indicated by the Poincare-Bendixson Theorem. FCHAOTIC can then be found by introducing a nonlinear perturbation of the form dx/dt=F(x,y)+ax-cy and dy/dt=G(x,y)+ay+cx where a<0 and F & G are continuously differentiable functions satisfying F(x,y)!2 + G(x,y)!2 =O (x2 +y2)2 !=FCHAOTIC as x→0. Equation 1!. This perturbation is the source of separable solutions of noise codes, and the stability and local periodicities of the noise sustained structure are the result of the equilibrium and bifurcation points being bounded within a finite phase space of its limit cycles as defined the Poincare-Bendixson Theorem.
CALCULATING FRECURSE
To calculate FRECURSE, we begin with a canonical equation for oscillations of a conservative system satisfying: ##EQU3## where F satisfies Equation 1! of Fchaotic and F(0)=F'(0)=0, and ε is a parameter where ε=0 1) implies simple harmonic motion with period 2π independent of the amplitude of the oscillation, and 2) when ε is small there are periodic solutions with period dependency on amplitude (a) and parameter (ε) such that:
x (t,ε)=a Cos(ε)tCos(t)-a Sin(ε)tSin(t) for the explicitly exact solution of the simple harmonic when perturbed by an external energy source.
This yields the simplified approximation for the differential equation for the bounded system as:
x(t,ε)=aCosωt+1/32εa.sup.3 (Cosω-Cos3ωt)+O(ε.sup.2 a.sup.5)
where
ω=1-3/8εa.sup.2 +O(ε.sup.2 a.sup.4)
for small ε→O.
which by use of Lagrange's identity: ##EQU4##
which is the limit cycle of the chaotic attractor. This then gives rise to a set of closed curves in phase space that define all possible points in space within which a signal may be expected to be bounded. These are the only convergence points that are useful for information transport within this autonomous two dimensional system, since these nonlinear bifurcations uniquely yield real period solutions satisfying:
ω(a)=1+10/3 a+O(a) as a ↑O
where a<0 and 2π/ω is the limit cycle (attractor) which together determine the global pattern of the phase space orbits with information carriers defined by ##EQU5## and their velocities of propagation defined as: ##EQU6##
where υ.sub.β is a local instantaneous velocity of propagation that is a function of spatial and temporal coordinates allowing information to be transmitted by using the velocity solution to synchronize the subsystems so that the information (i.e., the perturbation) can be identified as a field distortion which is a function of time and amplitude.
As is the case in a linear system, the ratio of ω/k (the ratio of the frequency to the wave number) as it applies to the phase velocity and the dispersion relation, shows that by varying the amplitude (rather than the source frequency) one can modulate the wave number in an exact manner rather than via a truncation of an expansion. The information carrying field of the nonlinear medium thus oscillates in space time with linear control possible as is denoted by: ##EQU7## (ref. pg 10 Nonlinear Material Science, Explicitly Exact Solutions in a Family of Nonlinear Media).
where ωc is a critical frequency that follows the relationship ωc =kc v-2/3k for the critical wave numbers as defined by satisfying the previously established equilibrium points of Fchaotic and the Unstable Nonlinear Schrodinger equation which governs the behavior of virtually all weakly nonlinear wavepackets including waveguides, solutions, and plasmas (ref. Drazin, P. G. & Johnson, R. S., 1989 Solitons: an Introduction. Cambridge University Press.)
Algorithm 2 describes the steps for separating out the carrier frequencies when nonlinear code division is used. Since the carrier frequencies are often functions of each other and themselves, they can be separated when noise is introduced to the system, rather than through externally defined carrier noise codes. This is described mathematically (in pseudo code) as:
ALGORITHM 2
______________________________________                                    
1.  Allocate bandwidth for channel switching scheme                       
2.  define/identify frequency bands                                       
3.  index bands                                                           
4.  define indexed bands as an aggregate bandwidth pool                   
5.  Allocate bandwidth as a function of data throughput                   
6.  upsample to increase Bandwidth per Connection                         
    downsample to increase Connections per Bandwidth                      
7.  Until Bandwidth Connection.sub.required > Bandwidth Remaining do      
8.  Waveform Signal = Attractor Waveform.sub.complex ; defined in         
    algorithm 1                                                           
9.  end until                                                             
______________________________________                                    
Line 1, defines the algorithm as an overall frequency pooling for bandwidth allocation scheme.
In step 2, the frequency bands are defined. This takes into account software defined parameters that may dictate that certain bands (due to licensing or other restraints) be avoided.
At step 3, the beginning and ending points of the segments in an absolute (e.g. Hz) sense are determined.
At step 4, the boundaries for the individual frequency segments available are stored.
Line 5 describes the purpose of steps 6 & 7. Depending on the required transmission rate, the bandwidth is allocated by performing either step 6 or step 7.
At step 6, bandwidth is increased to optimize for the individual connection rate.
At step 7, the connections are increased to optimize for more concurrent users.
At step 8, a test is made to determine if the system is fully loaded to perform step (9).
At step 9, the information is modulated onto the noise structure defined in algorithm 1 (steps 1-13).
The operation of the transmitter of FIG. 3 is shown in FIG. 4 and described below.
At step 601, a Digital or Analog Input is received at the input 310 of the transmitter 314.
At step 602, parameters for the encoder 312 and decoder 324 are stored. The parameters that are stored include: input format, output format, internal throughput information, embedded functions. The information stored effectively decouples the transmission from the information encoding by allowing the information to be treated as a digital stream that is only dependent on format information at the time of decoding. This allows the system to support any compression/encoding format in a modular fashion.
At step 603, the data is encoded at encoder 312 (for the transmitter 314) or decoded at the decoder 324 (for the receiver 318). The digital encoding converts analog signals into a digital information stream in any predetermined format (e.g. MPEG, DVI, ASCII, etc.) The decoding converts the digital information stream into a discrete analog form for output, buffering, or storage; via the application of a decoding/decompression method.
The system is CODEC and format independent to facilitate the implementation of any standard in modular fashion, via the decoupling of various aspects from the transmission method. A very high dynamic range broadband transceiver (similar in nature to the devices described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,230,956 and 4,112,374 to Steinbrecher) allows the entire software definable frequency band to be down-converted and digitized. Once in a digital format the information can be treated independently of its original transmission methodology (TDMA, CDMA, analog, etc.) using software driven digital signal processors.
At step 604, Transmission Parameter Storage: The transmission parameters set the boundary conditions for the nonlinear CDMA systems and decouples the rest of the present invention from the transmission methodology and conduits. The parameters that are stored include: bandwidth information (required, available, etc.); transmission characteristics (line crosstalk, frequency limits, existing spectrum profile, desired spectral density; and dynamic throughput information).
At step 605, Non linear CDMA coding: The CDMA coding is done in a non sequential, non linear fashion from a pool of dynamic complex frequencies that represent the transmission medium's chaotic noise characteristics combined with an encoding address template that is required for decoding of the signal. This allows multiple signals reaching the receiver to be combined constructively rather than treating them as multipath interference.
At step 606, Chaotic Noise Carrier Code Generator: The generation of Chaotic Noise Carrier Codes (CNC codes) requires dynamic sampling of the transmission conduit's ambient and spurious noise spectrum in order to optimize the carrier and modulation frequencies' spectral density for the required signal to noise ratio as well as avoiding interference with other concurrent traffic such as analog or digital transmissions of data, voice, or visual information.
At step 607, Dynamic Fine Gain Control: Digital signal processors are employed to calculate the value of the gain (positive or negative) to be applied to a received signal to maintain a signal to noise ratio high enough to yield an error rate that is a ratio of the required throughput to a stochastic function of the dynamic noise sampling frequency as dictated by available DSP technology and required throughput. The fine gain control also increases the resolution of the chaotic attractor for the specific connection and also constructively affects the noise sustained structure for the rest of the locally affected area.
At step 608, Gross Cell Gain Control: The transceiver's AGC (automatic gain control) adjusts the gain of the received signal to keep it in parity with the dynamic power level received at the remote transceiver or base station. The combined effect of the regulation of all of the transceivers' power levels within the cell has two important effects: 1) It maintains the effective size of the cell to be the minimum necessary to support the communications network, thereby minimizing the power requirements of both base stations and remote transceivers; and 2) it imposes a signature on the local area which has the effect of increasing the effective resolution of the chaotic attractor within the noise spectrum, which decreases the required output power of all transmission sources in that effective logical network. Each fixed base station or mobile transceiver contributes to the network as both an active power regulation component of the cell and as a passive bridge transparently supporting other traffic without incurring data or address overhead.
At step 609, Active Logic Bi-directional Interconnection: The active logic interconnections are hardware and software interfaces that are specifically designed for the particular conduit (e.g. powerline, twisted pair, ethernet cabling, wireless, etc.) They have several functions: 1) physical coupling (impedance matching, timing signal calculation and generation, etc.); 2) storage of software enabled distributed functionality that can be accessed remotely (decoding keys, logical/physical address updating, etc.); 3) simulating or directly supporting analog switching and digital routing of the network information (e.g. bit error rate, S/N ratio, ambient noise, etc.) In contrast to the systems it interfaces with, much of the need for active regulation of the transmission conduit is avoided by identifying and using the existing noise sustained structure for transmission coding. This negates the need to directly filter, amplify, or change the spectral density profile of the signal.
At step 610. Analog & Digital Output: the resolved transmission of (1) Input.
This example embodiment of the invention thus provides a conductive or dielectric conduit used as a waveform guide to constrain a wireless signal. The signal is dynamically and intelligently adjusted to take best advantage of the medium upon which it is being transmitted, and to use the inherent noise, power levels, available bandwidth and concurrent traffic to adjust that signal for optimum transmission quality. This results in a broad range of spectral density profiles that will support the desired signal.
BANDWIDTH INDEXING
The bandwidth indexing scheme is based on two criteria:
1. Bandwidth is allocated as a pool of available frequencies. FIG. 5 generally illustrates an example of the bandwidth indexing scheme of the present invention. In FIG. 5, the available frequencies are shown in a kHz range on the X-axis. Near the left of FIG. 5, a voice band is illustrated between 2 kHz and 4 kHz. Above that, a useable frequency band of between 4 kHz and 10 kHz is illustrated as Band A. Thereafter, a band from 10 kHz to 20 kHz is dedicated to data use; a band from 20 kHz to 60 kHz is available as useable Band B; a band from 60 kHz to 100 kHz is identified as containing non-sustainable noise; and a band from 70 kHz to 100 kHz is identified as a useable Band C. The present invention scrolls through available channels to identify the useable Bands A, B and C; the dedicated bands ("voice" and "data"); and the non-useable bands ("non-sustainable noise") in the spectrum shown in FIG. 5. These determinations are made through either external inputs (i.e., as in the case of dedicated voice and data lines) or by testing the frequency bands for the presence of sustainable noise components (i.e., as in the non-sustainable noise band of FIG. 5).
Once the useable bands A, B and C are identified by the present invention, the useable bands are pooled into a composite effective useable bandwidth of XHz. This is accomplished in the software of the present invention by identifying the bands A, B and C, mapping those bands, and transmitting data packets across the useable bands. The frequency pool is indexed as sets of beginning and ending frequencies and the map of the pool is made available to any node on the network as a packet that can be requested.
2. The bands to be used are software selectable as to the minimum and maximum power allowable within each band in a continuous or discrete manner.
An object of the invention is that the power output can be restrained to milliwatts at any given frequency from 1 KHz to 1 GHz. Available bandwidth increases with frequency as signal duration decreases. In a typical system this would be compensated for with an increase in transmission power. In the invention this is not the case, since the underlying noise of the transmission signal is used to sustain the signal by acting as a nonlinear waveform guide.
The spectral density profile is software/firmware definable in frequency band, power level and roll off/attenuation. This provides a large degree of latitude in modifying signal transmission characteristics to reflect the dynamic needs of the transmission conduit (air, powerline, twisted-pair, etc.) and other constraints.
An example embodiment of the present invention uses wave division multiple access, which is the basic method used in any frequency selectable broadcast or communication channel (e.g. radio or television), to identify or utilize available frequency bands.
ISOCHRONOUS TRANSMISSION
The above apparatus and method can provide and maintain an isochronous transmission stream. One exemplary method which may be employed to maintain an isochronous transmission stream provides data packet transmission, with each packet including a header containing:
a) the required bit rate at the present packet size;
b) the packet destination address; and
c) padding to be used for error detection and correction bits.
This method allows for dynamic upshifts and downshifts in the bandwidth allocation without prior knowledge of the throughput for the information stream. This allows an isochronous session to be maintained within a synchronous session. The error detection scheme is independent of the transmission, since the padding results in bits that can be stripped on either the sending or receiving end as needed to allow for a range of error detection from none (and no padding) to hardware level total error checking.
Before error correction, the nonlinear encoded digital information is capable of bit error rates exceeding 10-9.
Another exemplary method which may be employed to maintain an
isochronous transmission stream requires that there may be sent: at the beginning of the transmission:
a) the bit rate required for the at present mean throughput
b) destination address for the information stream
c) transmission protocols (error detection, handshaking) allowing isochronous sessions to be maintained in a synchronous fashion; and during the transmission:
a) changes required bit rate required for the at the present throughput based on bit error rates and signal to noise ratio
b) changes in communications protocols (error detection, etc.).
This method allows for an isochronous connection to be maintained within an asynchronous link.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the data is not modulated onto the noise signal directly but rather bits are split into redundant sets of themselves and sent as individually carried streams similar to a code division multi-access scheme. The major macroscopic difference between the present scheme and the code division multi-access scheme is the carrier frequencies in the present case are all naturally occurring periodic perturbations induced by nonlinear electromagnetic stimulation resulting in subharmonic bifurcations with long range phase coherence.
FIG. 6 illustrates an application of the present invention. Specifically, FIG. 6 shows a transmitter and a receiver coupled by the conduit 400 in which a uniform pulse code modulation (PCM) signal is modulated onto a chaotic noise signal in the transmitter and demodulated from the chaotic noise signal in the receiver. The aspects of the present invention relating to the prediction of the noise waveform on the conduit 400 is performed in the matched stabilizing subsystems 410 and 412. In the manner previously discussed, the matched stabilizing subsystems 410 and 412 produce synchronized chaotic signals that are modulated with the uniform PCM signal in the modulator 402 and demodulated from the combined signal in the demodulator 413.
The mux 404 is the output for the transmitter onto the conduit 400. It transmits at least three signals: 1) the result of the modulation of the uniform PCM signal and the output of the stabilizing subsystem 410 in the modulator 403, after its encoding by the residual encoder 403; 2) the gained compensation factor from the gain compensation circuit 406; and 3) the synch signal from the coefficient analyzer 414 that will drive both the stabilizing subsystem 410 and the stabilizing subsystem 412 to produce matched synchronized noise component signals. These three signals are transmitted across the conduit 400 to the demux 405 in the receiver.
From there, the modulated PCM signal ("residual") is decoded in the decoder 407 and input to the demodulator 413. The gain compensation signal is also output from the demux 405 to the decoder 407 to adjust for any gain disparity. Finally, the drive signal from the coefficient analyzer 414 is applied to the stabilizer subsystem 412 to produce the identical output as that produced by the stabilizing subsystem 410 and input to the demodulator 413. The output of the stabilizing subsystem 412 is then demodulated from the modulated signal, which has been decoded in the residual decoder 407, to reproduce the uniform PCM signal.
While the present invention can be applied to any communications infrastructure, the goal of the invention is to be ultimately applied as a discrete isochronous narrowcast with any-to-any functionality wireless system; or a logical improvement over existing analog and digital cellular systems. The intelligent/adaptive use of power provided by the present invention provides the capability to generate overlapping cells of any radius.
The average metropolitan area, for example, could be covered by two Wide Area Transceivers with overlapping cones of transmission. This is shown, by way of example, in FIG. 7. Local Transceivers within these areas would have a cell radius that is intelligently and dynamically adjusted based on communications needs such as bandwidth requirements, density of other cells, power levels, etc. Local transceivers outside the range of other local cells could tie into the Wide Area Transceiver to communicate with other local transceivers. As the density of cells increased, the need for Wide Area Transceivers would be reduced, as would the power requirements of the local cells. All Transceivers are both active and passive, in that they provide a routing pass through communications function even when not in use by the operator. This effectively distributes the switching and intelligence of the network to every local transceiver in a model similar to the emerging distributed peer-to-peer computer network.
The foregoing description of the preferred embodiments has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive nor to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. It is intended that the scope of the invention by defined by the claims and their equivalents.

Claims (6)

What is claimed is:
1. A method of transmitting and receiving information data on a conduit comprising the steps of:
1) dividing the information into discrete chips;
2) approximating a nonlinear chaotic noise component at an input end of the conduit, comprising the further steps of:
2A) identifying a frequency;
2B) testing the chaotic noise response on the conduit to determine if a sustainable chaotic noise component is present for the discrete chips at the identified frequency; and
2C) repeating steps 2A and 2B until an aggregate bandwidth of frequencies having sustainable chaotic noise components is identified for a predetermined throughput capable of carrying the discrete chips at a predetermined error rate:
3) modulating the discrete chips onto the approximated noise component of step 2) to obtain a modulated chaotic signal;
4) inputting the modulated chaotic signal onto the conduit;
5) approximating the nonlinear chaotic noise component at an output end of the conduit;
6) receiving the modulated chaotic signal from the conduit;
7) demodulating the approximated noise component of step 5) from the modulated chaotic signal to obtain the discrete chips.
2. A receiver in communication with a transmitter over a communication conduit having chaotic noise, the transmitter having a transmitter subsystem that outputs noise codes in response to the chaotic noise of the conduit and having a modulator to modulate the noise codes with a desired signal, the receiver comprising:
an input to receive the modulated signals from the transmitter;
a receiver subsystem matched to the transmitter subsystem to output the noise codes in synch with the noise the transmitter subsystem in response to the chaotic noise of the conduit;
a demodulator, in electrical communication with the input and the receiver subsystem, to receive the noise codes from the receiver subsystem and demodulate the desired signal from the received modulated signals; and
an output, in electrical communication with the demodulator, to output the desired signal.
3. A receiver according to claim 2, further including:
a gain compensator, in electrical communication with the demodulator, to adjust the gain of the received modulated signals.
4. A receiver according to claim 2, wherein the desired signal and the noise codes are in digital format.
5. A receiver according to claim 2, further including:
a detector, in electrical communication with the receiver subsystem, to empirically determine the noise codes.
6. A communication system, for communicating an information signal through a space having noise characterized at any instant by a chaotic attractor comprising:
a transmitter to approximate the chaotic attractor for the noise using a predetermined algorithm, to combine the chaotic attractor with the information signal, and to transmit the combined signal into the space; and
a receiver, in electrical communication with the transmitter via the space, to also approximate the chaotic attractor for the noise using the same predetermined algorithm, to receive the combined signal, and to separate the information signal from the combined signal using the chaotic attractor approximated by the receiver, wherein the receiver and the transmitter approximate the limit cycle of each chaotic attractor and respectively combine and separate the information signal with only those chaotic attractors having no less than a predetermined approximated limit cycle.
US08/649,976 1994-08-12 1996-05-16 Non-linear digital communications system Expired - Fee Related US5729607A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/649,976 US5729607A (en) 1994-08-12 1996-05-16 Non-linear digital communications system
US08/886,133 US6178217B1 (en) 1994-08-12 1997-06-30 Nonlinear digital communications system

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US28870894A 1994-08-12 1994-08-12
US08/649,976 US5729607A (en) 1994-08-12 1996-05-16 Non-linear digital communications system

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US28870894A Continuation 1994-08-12 1994-08-12

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US08/886,133 Continuation US6178217B1 (en) 1994-08-12 1997-06-30 Nonlinear digital communications system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US5729607A true US5729607A (en) 1998-03-17

Family

ID=23108291

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US08/649,976 Expired - Fee Related US5729607A (en) 1994-08-12 1996-05-16 Non-linear digital communications system
US08/886,133 Expired - Fee Related US6178217B1 (en) 1994-08-12 1997-06-30 Nonlinear digital communications system

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US08/886,133 Expired - Fee Related US6178217B1 (en) 1994-08-12 1997-06-30 Nonlinear digital communications system

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (2) US5729607A (en)
EP (1) EP0775409A4 (en)
AU (1) AU3215295A (en)
WO (1) WO1996006494A2 (en)

Cited By (66)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5818712A (en) * 1997-02-11 1998-10-06 Fractal Dynamics Llc Exponentially-amplified sampling and reconstruction of signals using controlled orbits of chaotic systems
US5825826A (en) * 1996-09-30 1998-10-20 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus for frequency domain ripple compensation for a communications transmitter
WO1998059458A1 (en) * 1997-06-23 1998-12-30 The Regents Of The University Of California Chaotic digital code-division multiple access (cdma) communication systems
US5939984A (en) * 1997-12-31 1999-08-17 Intermec Ip Corp. Combination radio frequency transponder (RF Tag) and magnetic electronic article surveillance (EAS) material
US6049614A (en) * 1996-12-30 2000-04-11 Daewoo Heavy Industries Ltd. Synchronized chaotic system and communication system using synchronized chaotic system
WO2000020986A1 (en) * 1998-10-05 2000-04-13 Lightel Systems Corporation Device, method, and system for implementing quality of service zero latency networks using dense wavelength division multiplexing
US6064701A (en) * 1997-12-05 2000-05-16 International Business Machines Corporation Synchronization-based communication systems
US6154137A (en) 1998-06-08 2000-11-28 3M Innovative Properties Company Identification tag with enhanced security
WO2001013518A1 (en) * 1999-08-18 2001-02-22 The Regents Of The University Of California Chaotic carrier pulse position modulation communication system and method
US6219341B1 (en) * 1997-03-20 2001-04-17 University Technology Corporation Method for bandwidth efficient multiple access wireless communication
WO2001099315A2 (en) * 2000-06-20 2001-12-27 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of audio files using a chaotic system
US20020154770A1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2002-10-24 Short Kevin M. Method and apparatus for chaotic opportunistic lossless compression of data
US20020164032A1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2002-11-07 Short Kevin M. Method and apparatus for remote digital key generation
US20030007635A1 (en) * 2001-07-09 2003-01-09 C4 Technology, Inc. Encryption method, program for encryption, memory medium for storing the program, and encryption apparatus, as well as decryption method and decryption apparatus
US6521892B2 (en) * 1998-10-09 2003-02-18 Thomson-Csf Optronics Canada Inc. Uncooled driver viewer enhancement system
US20030169940A1 (en) * 2000-06-20 2003-09-11 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of image files using a chaotic system
US20040022304A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-02-05 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication though local power lines
US6704314B1 (en) * 1999-12-15 2004-03-09 Sprint Communications Company, L.P. Method and apparatus to control cell substitution
US20040086117A1 (en) * 2002-06-06 2004-05-06 Petersen Mette Vesterager Methods for improving unpredictability of output of pseudo-random number generators
US20040090353A1 (en) * 2002-11-12 2004-05-13 Moore Steven A. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US20040133585A1 (en) * 2000-07-11 2004-07-08 Fabrice Pautot Data-processing arrangement comprising confidential data
US20040141561A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-07-22 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through twisted-pair wire media
US6782048B2 (en) 2002-06-21 2004-08-24 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband communication through a wired network
US6792111B1 (en) * 1998-10-12 2004-09-14 Stmicroelectronics S.R.L. Cryptation system for packet switching networks based on digital chaotic models
US20040214522A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-10-28 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US20040218688A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-11-04 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through a power grid
US20050054295A1 (en) * 1999-10-21 2005-03-10 Shervin Moloudi System and method for signal limiting
US6895034B2 (en) 2002-07-02 2005-05-17 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband pulse generation system and method
US20050172154A1 (en) * 2004-01-29 2005-08-04 Chaoticom, Inc. Systems and methods for providing digital content and caller alerts to wireless network-enabled devices
US6941395B1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2005-09-06 Monster Cable Products, Inc. DVI cable interface
US20050194661A1 (en) * 1996-11-14 2005-09-08 Micron Technology, Inc. Solvent prewet and method to dispense the solvent prewet
US20050270159A1 (en) * 1995-08-14 2005-12-08 Brady Michael J Combination radio frequency identification transponder (RFID Tag) and magnetic electronic article surveillance (EAS) tag
US6980656B1 (en) * 1998-07-17 2005-12-27 Science Applications International Corporation Chaotic communication system and method using modulation of nonreactive circuit elements
US7072469B1 (en) * 1999-07-23 2006-07-04 France Telecom Devices for emitting or receiving signals encrypted by deterministic chaos, and a transmission system, in particular a radio transmission system, including such devices
US20060291536A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2006-12-28 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US7170997B2 (en) 2000-12-07 2007-01-30 Cryptico A/S Method of generating pseudo-random numbers in an electronic device, and a method of encrypting and decrypting electronic data
US7215776B1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2007-05-08 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of audio files using a chaotic system
US20070260236A1 (en) * 2006-04-14 2007-11-08 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Radio frequency communication devices using chaotic signal and method thereof
US20070265011A1 (en) * 2006-05-11 2007-11-15 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Wireless communication terminal and method for controlling power and using channel by adjusting channel bandwidth of wireless communication terminal
US20080063039A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2008-03-13 John Santhoff Optimization of ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US20080219326A1 (en) * 2007-03-09 2008-09-11 John Santhoff Wireless multimedia link
US20080240124A1 (en) * 2007-03-28 2008-10-02 At&T Knowledge Ventures, L.P. System and method for deploying communication services
US20080273692A1 (en) * 2007-05-03 2008-11-06 Buehl George T Telephone Having Multiple Headset Connection Capability
US20090069051A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2009-03-12 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly accessing broadband services using intelligent covers
US20090192806A1 (en) * 2002-03-28 2009-07-30 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Broadband Frequency Translation for High Frequency Regeneration
US20090302288A1 (en) * 2008-06-04 2009-12-10 Dallas James Guardrail
US20100044444A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2010-02-25 Devicefidelity, Inc. Amplifying radio frequency signals
US7715461B2 (en) 1996-05-28 2010-05-11 Qualcomm, Incorporated High data rate CDMA wireless communication system using variable sized channel codes
US20100192482A1 (en) * 2007-07-27 2010-08-05 Dallas Rex James Frangible posts
US20100207087A1 (en) * 2006-11-06 2010-08-19 Dallas James Impact energy dissipation system
US20100215427A1 (en) * 2007-06-01 2010-08-26 Dallas James barrier section connection system
US20100254430A1 (en) * 2003-11-24 2010-10-07 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for direct chaotic communications with predetermined spectral mask
US20100264211A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2010-10-21 Devicefidelity, Inc. Magnetically coupling radio frequency antennas
US20110021254A1 (en) * 2004-11-24 2011-01-27 Research In Motion Limited System and method for selectively activating a communication device
US8070057B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2011-12-06 Devicefidelity, Inc. Switching between internal and external antennas
CN105373111A (en) * 2014-08-19 2016-03-02 英飞凌科技股份有限公司 Protected transmission of independent sensor signals
US9286643B2 (en) 2011-03-01 2016-03-15 Applaud, Llc Personalized memory compilation for members of a group and collaborative method to build a memory compilation
US9311766B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2016-04-12 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wireless communicating radio frequency signals
US20190044813A1 (en) * 2018-02-27 2019-02-07 Intel Corporation Customer bandwidth re-distribution in point-to-multipoint access
US20190342733A1 (en) * 2015-12-09 2019-11-07 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Environment-aware cross-layer communication protocol in underground oil reservoirs
US20200389510A1 (en) * 2004-04-30 2020-12-10 DISH Technologies L.L.C. Apparatus, system, and method for adaptive-rate shifting of streaming content
US11835675B2 (en) 2019-08-07 2023-12-05 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Determination of geologic permeability correlative with magnetic permeability measured in-situ
US11860077B2 (en) 2021-12-14 2024-01-02 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Fluid flow sensor using driver and reference electromechanical resonators
US11867049B1 (en) 2022-07-19 2024-01-09 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Downhole logging tool
US11879328B2 (en) 2021-08-05 2024-01-23 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Semi-permanent downhole sensor tool
US11913329B1 (en) 2022-09-21 2024-02-27 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Untethered logging devices and related methods of logging a wellbore

Families Citing this family (36)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP3437070B2 (en) * 1997-10-20 2003-08-18 富士通株式会社 Subscriber wireless access system
DE69832038D1 (en) * 1998-03-06 2005-12-01 St Microelectronics Srl Method and device for authentication and electronic signature
US6873652B1 (en) * 1998-04-01 2005-03-29 Panasonic Communications Co., Ltd. Activation of multiple xDSL modems with implicit channel probe
US6744893B1 (en) * 1999-08-25 2004-06-01 Southwest Research Institute Receiver estimation engine for a chaotic system
US20040090983A1 (en) * 1999-09-10 2004-05-13 Gehring Stephan W. Apparatus and method for managing variable-sized data slots within a time division multiple access frame
US7023833B1 (en) * 1999-09-10 2006-04-04 Pulse-Link, Inc. Baseband wireless network for isochronous communication
US20030193924A1 (en) * 1999-09-10 2003-10-16 Stephan Gehring Medium access control protocol for centralized wireless network communication management
US7088795B1 (en) * 1999-11-03 2006-08-08 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra wide band base band receiver
US20020056116A1 (en) * 2000-03-29 2002-05-09 Wesley Smith Home bus computer system and method
US6611794B1 (en) * 2000-04-20 2003-08-26 Southwest Research Institute Signal amplitude restoration apparatus and method
US6970448B1 (en) * 2000-06-21 2005-11-29 Pulse-Link, Inc. Wireless TDMA system and method for network communications
US6952456B1 (en) * 2000-06-21 2005-10-04 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra wide band transmitter
US7397867B2 (en) * 2000-12-14 2008-07-08 Pulse-Link, Inc. Mapping radio-frequency spectrum in a communication system
KR100938958B1 (en) * 2001-05-24 2010-01-26 에트링크스 유에스에이, 인크. Narrow band chaotic frequency shift keying
US7190722B2 (en) * 2003-03-03 2007-03-13 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US20040218687A1 (en) * 2003-04-29 2004-11-04 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US8379736B2 (en) * 2003-05-30 2013-02-19 Intellectual Ventures Holding 73 Llc Ultra-wideband communication system and method
US20050024038A1 (en) * 2003-07-31 2005-02-03 John Santhoff Sampling circuit apparatus and method
US20050035660A1 (en) * 2003-07-31 2005-02-17 John Santhoff Electromagnetic pulse generator
US20050035663A1 (en) * 2003-07-31 2005-02-17 Steven Moore Electromagnetic pulse generator
US7145961B2 (en) * 2003-08-28 2006-12-05 Pulselink, Inc. Ultra wideband transmitter
US20050058102A1 (en) * 2003-09-15 2005-03-17 Santhoff John H. Ultra-wideband communication protocol
US7339883B2 (en) * 2003-09-15 2008-03-04 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband communication protocol
US20050058153A1 (en) * 2003-09-15 2005-03-17 John Santhoff Common signaling method
US20050058114A1 (en) * 2003-09-15 2005-03-17 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication protocol
US20050113045A1 (en) * 2003-11-21 2005-05-26 John Santhoff Bridged ultra-wideband communication method and apparatus
US7046618B2 (en) * 2003-11-25 2006-05-16 Pulse-Link, Inc. Bridged ultra-wideband communication method and apparatus
US20050238113A1 (en) * 2004-04-26 2005-10-27 John Santhoff Hybrid communication method and apparatus
US7299042B2 (en) * 2004-07-30 2007-11-20 Pulse-Link, Inc. Common signaling method and apparatus
US20060121851A1 (en) * 2004-12-06 2006-06-08 Steve Moore Ultra-wideband security system
US20070014331A1 (en) * 2005-07-12 2007-01-18 John Eldon Ultra-wideband communications system and method
US20070014332A1 (en) * 2005-07-12 2007-01-18 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communications system and method
US8369426B2 (en) * 2007-05-04 2013-02-05 Ikanos Communications, Inc. Reducing the effect of noise in a multi-channel telecommunication receiver
US9143195B2 (en) * 2011-07-07 2015-09-22 Adtran, Inc. Systems and methods for communicating among network distribution points
US8644362B1 (en) 2011-09-01 2014-02-04 The SI Organization, Inc. Hybrid pseudo-random noise and chaotic signal implementation for covert communication
CN108449297B (en) * 2018-02-08 2020-09-25 西安理工大学 Phase separation differential chaos keying communication method based on hybrid system

Citations (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3102978A (en) * 1962-01-03 1963-09-03 Bernard B Bossard Variable frequency oscillator
US3513398A (en) * 1966-01-27 1970-05-19 Rca Corp Balanced mixer circuits
US3573624A (en) * 1968-06-24 1971-04-06 North American Rockwell Impulse response correction system
US4112374A (en) * 1976-09-23 1978-09-05 Steinbrecher Corporation Doubly balanced mixer with optimized dynamic range
US4747160A (en) * 1987-03-13 1988-05-24 Suite 12 Group Low power multi-function cellular television system
US4901307A (en) * 1986-10-17 1990-02-13 Qualcomm, Inc. Spread spectrum multiple access communication system using satellite or terrestrial repeaters
US4941193A (en) * 1987-10-02 1990-07-10 Iterated Systems, Inc. Methods and apparatus for image compression by iterated function system
US5007087A (en) * 1990-04-16 1991-04-09 Loral Aerospace Corp. Method and apparatus for generating secure random numbers using chaos
US5008903A (en) * 1989-05-25 1991-04-16 A.T. & T. Paradyne Adaptive transmit pre-emphasis for digital modem computed from noise spectrum
US5048086A (en) * 1990-07-16 1991-09-10 Hughes Aircraft Company Encryption system based on chaos theory
US5056109A (en) * 1989-11-07 1991-10-08 Qualcomm, Inc. Method and apparatus for controlling transmission power in a cdma cellular mobile telephone system
US5065447A (en) * 1989-07-05 1991-11-12 Iterated Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for processing digital data
USRE34004E (en) * 1953-03-30 1992-07-21 Itt Corporation Secure single sideband communication system using modulated noise subcarrier
US5226058A (en) * 1991-09-30 1993-07-06 Motorola, Inc. Spread spectrum data processor clock
US5245660A (en) * 1991-02-19 1993-09-14 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy System for producing synchronized signals
US5291555A (en) * 1992-12-14 1994-03-01 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Communication using synchronized chaotic systems
US5355114A (en) * 1991-05-10 1994-10-11 Echelon Corporation Reconstruction of signals using redundant channels
US5379346A (en) * 1993-09-30 1995-01-03 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Cascading synchronized chaotic systems
US5402334A (en) * 1992-05-11 1995-03-28 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Method and apparatus for pseudoperiodic drive
US5432697A (en) * 1993-04-23 1995-07-11 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Technique for controlling the symbolic dynamics of chaotic systems to generate digital communications waveforms
US5442510A (en) * 1993-06-23 1995-08-15 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Control system for tracking nonlinear systems
US5473694A (en) * 1994-06-29 1995-12-05 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Synchronization of nonautonomous chaotic systems
US5510976A (en) * 1993-02-08 1996-04-23 Hitachi, Ltd. Control system

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3718765A (en) * 1970-02-18 1973-02-27 J Halaby Communication system with provision for concealing intelligence signals with noise signals
US5479447A (en) * 1993-05-03 1995-12-26 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford, Junior University Method and apparatus for adaptive, variable bandwidth, high-speed data transmission of a multicarrier signal over digital subscriber lines
KR950013124B1 (en) * 1993-06-19 1995-10-25 엘지전자주식회사 Chaos feedback system

Patent Citations (24)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USRE34004E (en) * 1953-03-30 1992-07-21 Itt Corporation Secure single sideband communication system using modulated noise subcarrier
US3102978A (en) * 1962-01-03 1963-09-03 Bernard B Bossard Variable frequency oscillator
US3513398A (en) * 1966-01-27 1970-05-19 Rca Corp Balanced mixer circuits
US3573624A (en) * 1968-06-24 1971-04-06 North American Rockwell Impulse response correction system
US4112374A (en) * 1976-09-23 1978-09-05 Steinbrecher Corporation Doubly balanced mixer with optimized dynamic range
US4230956A (en) * 1976-09-23 1980-10-28 Steinbrecher Corporation Doubly balanced mixer with optimized dynamic range
US4901307A (en) * 1986-10-17 1990-02-13 Qualcomm, Inc. Spread spectrum multiple access communication system using satellite or terrestrial repeaters
US4747160A (en) * 1987-03-13 1988-05-24 Suite 12 Group Low power multi-function cellular television system
US4941193A (en) * 1987-10-02 1990-07-10 Iterated Systems, Inc. Methods and apparatus for image compression by iterated function system
US5008903A (en) * 1989-05-25 1991-04-16 A.T. & T. Paradyne Adaptive transmit pre-emphasis for digital modem computed from noise spectrum
US5065447A (en) * 1989-07-05 1991-11-12 Iterated Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for processing digital data
US5056109A (en) * 1989-11-07 1991-10-08 Qualcomm, Inc. Method and apparatus for controlling transmission power in a cdma cellular mobile telephone system
US5007087A (en) * 1990-04-16 1991-04-09 Loral Aerospace Corp. Method and apparatus for generating secure random numbers using chaos
US5048086A (en) * 1990-07-16 1991-09-10 Hughes Aircraft Company Encryption system based on chaos theory
US5245660A (en) * 1991-02-19 1993-09-14 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy System for producing synchronized signals
US5355114A (en) * 1991-05-10 1994-10-11 Echelon Corporation Reconstruction of signals using redundant channels
US5226058A (en) * 1991-09-30 1993-07-06 Motorola, Inc. Spread spectrum data processor clock
US5402334A (en) * 1992-05-11 1995-03-28 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Method and apparatus for pseudoperiodic drive
US5291555A (en) * 1992-12-14 1994-03-01 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Communication using synchronized chaotic systems
US5510976A (en) * 1993-02-08 1996-04-23 Hitachi, Ltd. Control system
US5432697A (en) * 1993-04-23 1995-07-11 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Technique for controlling the symbolic dynamics of chaotic systems to generate digital communications waveforms
US5442510A (en) * 1993-06-23 1995-08-15 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Control system for tracking nonlinear systems
US5379346A (en) * 1993-09-30 1995-01-03 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Cascading synchronized chaotic systems
US5473694A (en) * 1994-06-29 1995-12-05 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Synchronization of nonautonomous chaotic systems

Non-Patent Citations (44)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
"Non-linear Circuits", Translation of Circuits non-lineaires, Artech House, Inc., 1986, pp. 187-188.
Blumenfeld, "Explicity Exact Solutions For Waves In A Family Of Nonlinear Media," Physica D, North-Holland, Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., 1993., pp. 7-13.
Blumenfeld, Explicity Exact Solutions For Waves In A Family Of Nonlinear Media , Physica D, North Holland, Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., 1993., pp. 7 13. *
Bonca et al., "Quantum Simulations of the Degenerate Single-Impurity Anderson Model," CNSL Newsletter, No. 96, Dec. 1993, pp. 1-14.
Bonca et al., Quantum Simulations of the Degenerate Single Impurity Anderson Model , CNSL Newsletter, No. 96, Dec. 1993, pp. 1 14. *
Davies & Gribbin, "The Matter Myth," Simon & Schuster, 1992, 15, 30-42.
Davies & Gribbin, The Matter Myth , Simon & Schuster, 1992, 15, 30 42. *
Ditto et al., "Mastering Chaos," Scientific American, Aug. 1993, pp. 78-84.
Ditto et al., Mastering Chaos , Scientific American, Aug. 1993, pp. 78 84. *
Gilder, "Into The Fibersphere," Forbes ASAP, Dec. 1992.
Gilder, "Telecosm: Auctioning The Airways, " Forbes ASAP, Apr. 1994.
Gilder, "Telecosm: Life After Television, Updated," Forbes ASAP, Feb. 1994.
Gilder, "Telecosm: Metcalfe's Law and Legacy," Forbes ASAP, Dec. 1993.
Gilder, "Telecosm: The New Rule Of Wireless," Forbes ASAP, Mar. 1993.
Gilder, Into The Fibersphere , Forbes ASAP, Dec. 1992. *
Gilder, Telecosm : Auctioning The Airways , Forbes ASAP, Apr. 1994. *
Gilder, Telecosm : Life After Television, Updated , Forbes ASAP, Feb. 1994. *
Gilder, Telecosm : Metcalfe s Law and Legacy , Forbes ASAP, Dec. 1993. *
Gilder, Telecosm : The New Rule Of Wireless , Forbes ASAP, Mar. 1993. *
Gleick, "Chaos: Making A New Science," Penguin Books, 1988, pp. 46-54, 64-80, 90-93, 133-140.
Gleick, Chaos : Making A New Science , Penguin Books, 1988, pp. 46 54, 64 80, 90 93, 133 140. *
Green, "Fiber Optic Networks," Prentice Hall, 1993, pp. 129, 192-198, 339-340.
Green, Fiber Optic Networks , Prentice Hall, 1993, pp. 129, 192 198, 339 340. *
Hargadon, "Networked Media Sends a Message," New Media, Nov., 1992, pp. 26-29.
Hargadon, Networked Media Sends a Message , New Media, Nov., 1992, pp. 26 29. *
Kano et al., "ISDN: Standardization", Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 79, No. 2, Feb. 1991, pp. 118-124.
Kano et al., ISDN : Standardization , Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 79, No. 2, Feb. 1991, pp. 118 124. *
Kleinrock, "ISDN: The Path To Broadband Networks", Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 79, No. 2, Feb. 1991, pp. 112-117.
Kleinrock, ISDN : The Path To Broadband Networks , Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 79, No. 2, Feb. 1991, pp. 112 117. *
Moon, "Chaotic and Fractal Dynamics, " John Wiley & Sons, 1992, 9-30, 55-78, 213-216.
Moon, Chaotic and Fractal Dynamics , John Wiley & Sons, 1992, 9 30, 55 78, 213 216. *
Neff & Carroll, The Amateur Scientist : Circuits That Get Chaos In Sync, Scientific American, Aug. 1993, pp. 120 122. *
Neff & Carroll, The Amateur Scientist: "Circuits That Get Chaos In Sync," Scientific American, Aug. 1993, pp. 120-122.
Non linear Circuits , Translation of Circuits non lineaires, Artech House, Inc., 1986, pp. 187 188. *
Personick, "Towards Global Information Networking," Proceedings Of The IEEE, vol. 81, No. 11, Nov. 1993, pp. 1549-1557.
Personick, Towards Global Information Networking , Proceedings Of The IEEE, vol. 81, No. 11, Nov. 1993, pp. 1549 1557. *
Richter et al., "Type-I Intermittency in Semiconductor Breakdown-Experimental Consequences Of Bifurcations From a Torodal Attractor," Physica D, North-Holland, Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., 1993., pp. 188-194.
Richter et al., Type I Intermittency in Semiconductor Breakdown Experimental Consequences Of Bifurcations From a Torodal Attractor , Physica D, North Holland, Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., 1993., pp. 188 194. *
Shannon & Weaver, "The Mathematical Theory of Communication," University of Illinois Press, 1949, pp. 16-24, 65-74, 81-90.
Shannon & Weaver, The Mathematical Theory of Communication , University of Illinois Press, 1949, pp. 16 24, 65 74, 81 90. *
Stix, "Domesticating Cyberspace," Scientific American, Aug. 1993, pp. 101-110.
Stix, Domesticating Cyberspace , Scientific American, Aug. 1993, pp. 101 110. *
Wu, et al., "ISDN: A Snapshot," Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 79, No. 2., Feb. 1991, pp. 103-111.
Wu, et al., ISDN : A Snapshot , Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 79, No. 2., Feb. 1991, pp. 103 111. *

Cited By (148)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20050270159A1 (en) * 1995-08-14 2005-12-08 Brady Michael J Combination radio frequency identification transponder (RFID Tag) and magnetic electronic article surveillance (EAS) tag
US8588277B2 (en) 1996-05-28 2013-11-19 Qualcomm Incorporated High data rate CDMA wireless communication system using variable sized channel codes
US7715461B2 (en) 1996-05-28 2010-05-11 Qualcomm, Incorporated High data rate CDMA wireless communication system using variable sized channel codes
US8213485B2 (en) 1996-05-28 2012-07-03 Qualcomm Incorporated High rate CDMA wireless communication system using variable sized channel codes
US5825826A (en) * 1996-09-30 1998-10-20 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus for frequency domain ripple compensation for a communications transmitter
US20050194661A1 (en) * 1996-11-14 2005-09-08 Micron Technology, Inc. Solvent prewet and method to dispense the solvent prewet
US6049614A (en) * 1996-12-30 2000-04-11 Daewoo Heavy Industries Ltd. Synchronized chaotic system and communication system using synchronized chaotic system
US5818712A (en) * 1997-02-11 1998-10-06 Fractal Dynamics Llc Exponentially-amplified sampling and reconstruction of signals using controlled orbits of chaotic systems
US6219341B1 (en) * 1997-03-20 2001-04-17 University Technology Corporation Method for bandwidth efficient multiple access wireless communication
WO1998059458A1 (en) * 1997-06-23 1998-12-30 The Regents Of The University Of California Chaotic digital code-division multiple access (cdma) communication systems
US6064701A (en) * 1997-12-05 2000-05-16 International Business Machines Corporation Synchronization-based communication systems
US5939984A (en) * 1997-12-31 1999-08-17 Intermec Ip Corp. Combination radio frequency transponder (RF Tag) and magnetic electronic article surveillance (EAS) material
US6154137A (en) 1998-06-08 2000-11-28 3M Innovative Properties Company Identification tag with enhanced security
US6646554B1 (en) 1998-06-08 2003-11-11 3M Innovative Properties Company Identification tag with enhanced security
US7245723B2 (en) 1998-07-17 2007-07-17 Science Applications International Corporation Chaotic communication system and method using modulation of nonreactive circuit elements
US20060072754A1 (en) * 1998-07-17 2006-04-06 Science Applications International Corporation Chaotic communication system and method using modulation of nonreactive circuit elements
US6980656B1 (en) * 1998-07-17 2005-12-27 Science Applications International Corporation Chaotic communication system and method using modulation of nonreactive circuit elements
WO2000020986A1 (en) * 1998-10-05 2000-04-13 Lightel Systems Corporation Device, method, and system for implementing quality of service zero latency networks using dense wavelength division multiplexing
US6521892B2 (en) * 1998-10-09 2003-02-18 Thomson-Csf Optronics Canada Inc. Uncooled driver viewer enhancement system
US6792111B1 (en) * 1998-10-12 2004-09-14 Stmicroelectronics S.R.L. Cryptation system for packet switching networks based on digital chaotic models
US7072469B1 (en) * 1999-07-23 2006-07-04 France Telecom Devices for emitting or receiving signals encrypted by deterministic chaos, and a transmission system, in particular a radio transmission system, including such devices
US6310906B1 (en) * 1999-08-18 2001-10-30 The Regents Of The University Of California Chaotic carrier pulse position modulation communication system and method
WO2001013518A1 (en) * 1999-08-18 2001-02-22 The Regents Of The University Of California Chaotic carrier pulse position modulation communication system and method
US8718563B2 (en) 1999-10-21 2014-05-06 Broadcom Corporation System and method for signal limiting
US20050054295A1 (en) * 1999-10-21 2005-03-10 Shervin Moloudi System and method for signal limiting
US8014724B2 (en) * 1999-10-21 2011-09-06 Broadcom Corporation System and method for signal limiting
US7215772B2 (en) * 1999-11-09 2007-05-08 Chaoticom, Inc. Method and apparatus for remote digital key generation
US20020164032A1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2002-11-07 Short Kevin M. Method and apparatus for remote digital key generation
US7440570B2 (en) 1999-11-09 2008-10-21 Groove Mobile, Inc. Method and apparatus for remote digital key generation
US20020154770A1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2002-10-24 Short Kevin M. Method and apparatus for chaotic opportunistic lossless compression of data
US7286670B2 (en) 1999-11-09 2007-10-23 Chaoticom, Inc. Method and apparatus for chaotic opportunistic lossless compression of data
US20070208791A1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2007-09-06 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of audio files using a chaotic system
US20070177730A1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2007-08-02 Short Kevin M Method and apparatus for remote digital key generation
US7215776B1 (en) * 1999-11-09 2007-05-08 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of audio files using a chaotic system
US6704314B1 (en) * 1999-12-15 2004-03-09 Sprint Communications Company, L.P. Method and apparatus to control cell substitution
US7110547B2 (en) 2000-06-20 2006-09-19 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of image files using a chaotic system
US20070053517A1 (en) * 2000-06-20 2007-03-08 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of image files using a chaotic system
US20030169940A1 (en) * 2000-06-20 2003-09-11 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of image files using a chaotic system
WO2001099315A3 (en) * 2000-06-20 2002-07-11 Univ New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of audio files using a chaotic system
WO2001099315A2 (en) * 2000-06-20 2001-12-27 University Of New Hampshire Method and apparatus for the compression and decompression of audio files using a chaotic system
US20040133585A1 (en) * 2000-07-11 2004-07-08 Fabrice Pautot Data-processing arrangement comprising confidential data
US7486794B2 (en) * 2000-07-11 2009-02-03 Gemalto Sa Data-processing arrangement comprising confidential data
US7170997B2 (en) 2000-12-07 2007-01-30 Cryptico A/S Method of generating pseudo-random numbers in an electronic device, and a method of encrypting and decrypting electronic data
US20030007635A1 (en) * 2001-07-09 2003-01-09 C4 Technology, Inc. Encryption method, program for encryption, memory medium for storing the program, and encryption apparatus, as well as decryption method and decryption apparatus
US7218733B2 (en) * 2001-07-09 2007-05-15 C4 Technology Inc. Encryption method, program for encryption, memory medium for storing the program, and encryption apparatus, as well as decryption method and decryption apparatus
US9767816B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2017-09-19 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation High frequency regeneration of an audio signal with phase adjustment
US20090192806A1 (en) * 2002-03-28 2009-07-30 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Broadband Frequency Translation for High Frequency Regeneration
US8126709B2 (en) * 2002-03-28 2012-02-28 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Broadband frequency translation for high frequency regeneration
US8285543B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2012-10-09 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Circular frequency translation with noise blending
US8457956B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2013-06-04 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Reconstructing an audio signal by spectral component regeneration and noise blending
US9704496B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2017-07-11 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation High frequency regeneration of an audio signal with phase adjustment
US9177564B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2015-11-03 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Reconstructing an audio signal by spectral component regeneration and noise blending
US9324328B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2016-04-26 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Reconstructing an audio signal with a noise parameter
US9343071B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2016-05-17 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Reconstructing an audio signal with a noise parameter
US9412389B1 (en) 2002-03-28 2016-08-09 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation High frequency regeneration of an audio signal by copying in a circular manner
US9412383B1 (en) 2002-03-28 2016-08-09 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation High frequency regeneration of an audio signal by copying in a circular manner
US9412388B1 (en) 2002-03-28 2016-08-09 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation High frequency regeneration of an audio signal with temporal shaping
US9466306B1 (en) 2002-03-28 2016-10-11 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation High frequency regeneration of an audio signal with temporal shaping
US9947328B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2018-04-17 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Methods, apparatus and systems for determining reconstructed audio signal
US9548060B1 (en) 2002-03-28 2017-01-17 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation High frequency regeneration of an audio signal with temporal shaping
US9653085B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2017-05-16 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Reconstructing an audio signal having a baseband and high frequency components above the baseband
US10529347B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2020-01-07 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Methods, apparatus and systems for determining reconstructed audio signal
US10269362B2 (en) 2002-03-28 2019-04-23 Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation Methods, apparatus and systems for determining reconstructed audio signal
US20040086117A1 (en) * 2002-06-06 2004-05-06 Petersen Mette Vesterager Methods for improving unpredictability of output of pseudo-random number generators
US20040214522A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-10-28 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US20040022304A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-02-05 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication though local power lines
US6782048B2 (en) 2002-06-21 2004-08-24 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband communication through a wired network
US7167525B2 (en) 2002-06-21 2007-01-23 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband communication through twisted-pair wire media
US7099368B2 (en) 2002-06-21 2006-08-29 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US20080063039A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2008-03-13 John Santhoff Optimization of ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US7027483B2 (en) 2002-06-21 2006-04-11 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband communication through local power lines
US20070116097A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2007-05-24 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through twisted-pair wire media
US20060291536A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2006-12-28 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US20040218688A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-11-04 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through a power grid
US7486742B2 (en) 2002-06-21 2009-02-03 Pulse-Link, Inc. Optimization of ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
US20040141561A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-07-22 John Santhoff Ultra-wideband communication through twisted-pair wire media
US6895034B2 (en) 2002-07-02 2005-05-17 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband pulse generation system and method
US6941395B1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2005-09-06 Monster Cable Products, Inc. DVI cable interface
US20040090353A1 (en) * 2002-11-12 2004-05-13 Moore Steven A. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US6836226B2 (en) 2002-11-12 2004-12-28 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US6836223B2 (en) 2002-11-12 2004-12-28 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US20040140917A1 (en) * 2002-11-12 2004-07-22 Moore Steven A. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US6781530B2 (en) 2002-11-12 2004-08-24 Pulse-Link, Inc. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US20040140918A1 (en) * 2002-11-12 2004-07-22 Moore Steven A. Ultra-wideband pulse modulation system and method
US20100254430A1 (en) * 2003-11-24 2010-10-07 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for direct chaotic communications with predetermined spectral mask
US8116352B2 (en) * 2003-11-26 2012-02-14 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for direct chaotic communications with predetermined spectral mask
US20050172154A1 (en) * 2004-01-29 2005-08-04 Chaoticom, Inc. Systems and methods for providing digital content and caller alerts to wireless network-enabled devices
US20200389510A1 (en) * 2004-04-30 2020-12-10 DISH Technologies L.L.C. Apparatus, system, and method for adaptive-rate shifting of streaming content
US20110021254A1 (en) * 2004-11-24 2011-01-27 Research In Motion Limited System and method for selectively activating a communication device
US20070260236A1 (en) * 2006-04-14 2007-11-08 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Radio frequency communication devices using chaotic signal and method thereof
US7706752B2 (en) * 2006-05-11 2010-04-27 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Wireless communication terminal and method for controlling power and using channel by adjusting channel bandwidth of wireless communication terminal
US20070265011A1 (en) * 2006-05-11 2007-11-15 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Wireless communication terminal and method for controlling power and using channel by adjusting channel bandwidth of wireless communication terminal
US20100207087A1 (en) * 2006-11-06 2010-08-19 Dallas James Impact energy dissipation system
US8596617B2 (en) 2006-11-06 2013-12-03 Axip Limited Impact energy dissipation system
US20080219326A1 (en) * 2007-03-09 2008-09-11 John Santhoff Wireless multimedia link
US8630300B2 (en) * 2007-03-28 2014-01-14 At&T Intellectual Property I, L.P. System and method for deploying communication services
US20080240124A1 (en) * 2007-03-28 2008-10-02 At&T Knowledge Ventures, L.P. System and method for deploying communication services
US20080273692A1 (en) * 2007-05-03 2008-11-06 Buehl George T Telephone Having Multiple Headset Connection Capability
US20100215427A1 (en) * 2007-06-01 2010-08-26 Dallas James barrier section connection system
US8864108B2 (en) 2007-06-01 2014-10-21 Valmont Highway Technology Limited Barrier section connection system
US20100192482A1 (en) * 2007-07-27 2010-08-05 Dallas Rex James Frangible posts
US8978225B2 (en) 2007-07-27 2015-03-17 Valmont Highway Technology Limited Frangible posts
US9311766B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2016-04-12 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wireless communicating radio frequency signals
US9418362B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2016-08-16 Devicefidelity, Inc. Amplifying radio frequency signals
US8776189B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2014-07-08 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly accessing broadband services using intelligent cards
US20110177852A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2011-07-21 Devicefidelity, Inc. Executing transactions using mobile-device covers
US8915447B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2014-12-23 Devicefidelity, Inc. Amplifying radio frequency signals
US8925827B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2015-01-06 Devicefidelity, Inc. Amplifying radio frequency signals
US8548540B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2013-10-01 Devicefidelity, Inc. Executing transactions using mobile-device covers
US9016589B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2015-04-28 Devicefidelity, Inc. Selectively switching antennas of transaction cards
US9106647B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2015-08-11 Devicefidelity, Inc. Executing transactions secured user credentials
US9152911B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2015-10-06 Devicefidelity, Inc. Switching between internal and external antennas
US20110053560A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2011-03-03 Deepak Jain Updating Mobile Devices with Additional Elements
US9195931B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2015-11-24 Devicefidelity, Inc. Switching between internal and external antennas
US9225718B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2015-12-29 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly accessing broadband services using intelligent cards
US8109444B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2012-02-07 Devicefidelity, Inc. Selectively switching antennas of transaction cards
US8341083B1 (en) 2007-09-12 2012-12-25 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly executing financial transactions
US9304555B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2016-04-05 Devicefidelity, Inc. Magnetically coupling radio frequency antennas
US8190221B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2012-05-29 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly accessing broadband services using intelligent covers
US20100264211A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2010-10-21 Devicefidelity, Inc. Magnetically coupling radio frequency antennas
US8070057B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2011-12-06 Devicefidelity, Inc. Switching between internal and external antennas
US9384480B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2016-07-05 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly executing financial transactions
US8430325B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2013-04-30 Devicefidelity, Inc. Executing transactions secured user credentials
US8380259B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2013-02-19 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly accessing broadband services using intelligent covers
US20100044444A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2010-02-25 Devicefidelity, Inc. Amplifying radio frequency signals
US7941197B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2011-05-10 Devicefidelity, Inc. Updating mobile devices with additional elements
US8381999B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2013-02-26 Devicefidelity, Inc. Selectively switching antennas of transaction cards
US20090065571A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2009-03-12 Devicefidelity, Inc. Selectively switching antennas of transaction cards
US20090069052A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2009-03-12 Devicefidelity, Inc. Receiving broadcast signals using intelligent covers for mobile devices
US20090069051A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2009-03-12 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly accessing broadband services using intelligent covers
US20090070861A1 (en) * 2007-09-12 2009-03-12 Devicefidelity, Inc. Wirelessly accessing broadband services using intelligent cards
US8424849B2 (en) 2008-06-04 2013-04-23 Axip Limited Guardrail
US20090302288A1 (en) * 2008-06-04 2009-12-10 Dallas James Guardrail
US9286643B2 (en) 2011-03-01 2016-03-15 Applaud, Llc Personalized memory compilation for members of a group and collaborative method to build a memory compilation
US10346512B2 (en) 2011-03-01 2019-07-09 Applaud, Llc Personalized memory compilation for members of a group and collaborative method to build a memory compilation
CN105373111A (en) * 2014-08-19 2016-03-02 英飞凌科技股份有限公司 Protected transmission of independent sensor signals
US9953521B2 (en) * 2014-08-19 2018-04-24 Infineon Technologies Ag Protected transmission of independent sensor signals
CN105373111B (en) * 2014-08-19 2019-10-18 英飞凌科技股份有限公司 The system and method for protected transmission for separate sensor signal
US20170162040A1 (en) * 2014-08-19 2017-06-08 Infineon Technologies Ag Protected transmission of independent sensor signals
US20190342733A1 (en) * 2015-12-09 2019-11-07 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Environment-aware cross-layer communication protocol in underground oil reservoirs
US10887743B2 (en) * 2015-12-09 2021-01-05 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Environment-aware cross-layer communication protocol in underground oil reservoirs
US10742508B2 (en) * 2018-02-27 2020-08-11 Intel Corporation Customer bandwidth re-distribution in point-to-multipoint access
US20190044813A1 (en) * 2018-02-27 2019-02-07 Intel Corporation Customer bandwidth re-distribution in point-to-multipoint access
US11835675B2 (en) 2019-08-07 2023-12-05 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Determination of geologic permeability correlative with magnetic permeability measured in-situ
US11879328B2 (en) 2021-08-05 2024-01-23 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Semi-permanent downhole sensor tool
US11860077B2 (en) 2021-12-14 2024-01-02 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Fluid flow sensor using driver and reference electromechanical resonators
US11867049B1 (en) 2022-07-19 2024-01-09 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Downhole logging tool
US11913329B1 (en) 2022-09-21 2024-02-27 Saudi Arabian Oil Company Untethered logging devices and related methods of logging a wellbore

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US6178217B1 (en) 2001-01-23
AU3215295A (en) 1996-03-14
WO1996006494A3 (en) 1996-04-11
EP0775409A2 (en) 1997-05-28
EP0775409A4 (en) 2000-03-22
WO1996006494A2 (en) 1996-02-29

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5729607A (en) Non-linear digital communications system
US5387927A (en) Method and apparatus for broadband transmission from a central office to a number of subscribers
US7099368B2 (en) Ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
CN1758560B (en) Power line communication methods
US5682419A (en) Method and apparatus for providing infrastructure call support
US5124980A (en) Synchronous multiport digital 2-way communications network using T1 PCM on a CATV cable
US5495483A (en) Method and apparatus for allocating carrier channels
JP4209952B2 (en) Broadband radio system and network architecture providing broadband / narrowband services with static and dynamic optimal allocation of frequency bandwidth / channel
US5768279A (en) Broad band transmission system
US5619505A (en) Method for producing and recovering a data stream for a DMT transceiver
US5608725A (en) Method and apparatus of a communications system having a DMT infrastructure
US20070274199A1 (en) Method and system for modifying modulation of power line communications signals for maximizing data throughput rate
US5539777A (en) Method and apparatus for a DMT receiver having a data de-formatter coupled directly to a constellation decoder
WO1998009439A1 (en) Catv network for transport of radio frequency signals
US7006535B2 (en) Method and system for providing time offset to minislot clock and count in headend devices
EA001921B1 (en) Data transfer method and system in low voltage networks
US5606577A (en) Method and apparatus for a DMT transmitter having a data for matter coupled directly to a constellation encoder
WO1996019089A1 (en) Communications system
EP1142347A2 (en) Method and system for combining wireless phone jack and rf wireless communications
US20110281611A1 (en) Transmission level control method and transceiver apparatus in wireless local loop system
US7042902B2 (en) Techniques for communicating information using prime-frequency waveform mapping
JP2001502501A (en) Circuit and method for simultaneously transmitting voice and data information
US20060291536A1 (en) Ultra-wideband communication through a wire medium
Lee et al. A code-division multiple-access local area network
WO2001082581A1 (en) Method and system for power line communication with set top boxes

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 4

REMI Maintenance fee reminder mailed
LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED FOR FAILURE TO PAY MAINTENANCE FEES (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: EXP.); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: SMALL ENTITY

STCH Information on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362

FP Lapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date: 20060317